Carter, Jimmy
U*X*L Encyclopedia of World Biography
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2003
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Jimmy Carter
Born: October 1, 1924
Plains, Georgia
American president, governor, and humanitarian
Jimmy Carter was a state senator, governor, and the first U.S. president to be elected from the deep South in 132 years, serving one term (1977–81). In 1980 he lost
his bid for reelection but continues to be a much admired peacemaker and human rights leader at home and abroad.
Childhood and education
James Earl Carter was born in Plains, Georgia, on October 1, 1924. He was the first child of farmer and small businessman James Earl Carter and former nurse Lillian Gordy Carter. At five, Jimmy already showed a talent for business: he began to sell peanuts on the streets of Plains. At the age of nine, Carter invested his earnings in five bales of cotton, which he stored for several years and then sold at a profit. With this money he was able to purchase five old houses in Plains.
Upon his graduation from high school in 1941, Carter enrolled in Georgia Southwestern College, but in 1942 he was appointed to the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis. Carter entered the academy in 1943 and showed a special talent for electronics and naval tactics. He would eventually work on the nation's first nuclear-powered submarines. During his time in the navy he also met Rosalynn Smith (1927–), whom he married on July 7, 1947. The couple had four children.
Civic activist to politician
Carter wanted to become an admiral (a high-ranking officer in the navy), but in 1953, following his father's death from cancer, he returned to Plains to manage the family-owned farm and peanut warehouses. In order to keep up with modern farming methods, he studied at the Agricultural Experimental Station in Tifton, Georgia. During these years in Plains, Carter was active in a number of civic organizations. He set himself apart from others by showing his concern for members of all races, which could be traced back to his mother's refusal to accept many of the deep South's racist (dislike or disrespect of a person based on the color of his or her skin) traditions.
Carter's interest in politics may have come from his father, who had served in the Georgia legislature. In 1962 he ran for a seat in the Georgia Senate and defeated his Republican opponent by approximately one thousand votes. As a state senator, Carter promised to read every single bill that came up. When it looked as if he would not be able to keep this promise because of the large number of bills, he took a speed reading course to solve the problem. He earned a reputation
as an effective legislator and was reelected to the state senate in 1964.
In 1966 Carter decided to run for governor of Georgia. He lost to Lester Maddox (1915–) in the Democratic primary election. Although disappointed, Carter pushed forward. Between 1966 and 1970 he traveled throughout the state, making close to eighteen hundred speeches, studying the problems of Georgia, and campaigning. In the 1970 election, Carter's hard work paid off and he won Georgia's top position.
Governor of Georgia
When he was elected governor, Carter announced his intention to help all poor and needy Georgians, regardless of race. This speech won Carter national attention for the first time. He called for an end to prejudice (unequal treatment based on a person's race) and for education, jobs, and "simple justice" for the poor. As governor, he signed into law a bill ensuring that all areas of Georgia would have equal state aid for education. Carter also worked to cut government waste, combining three hundred state agencies into only thirty. The number of African American appointees on state boards and agencies increased, and the number of African American state employees rose by 40 percent. During his term, laws were passed to protect historical sites, to conserve the environment, and to encourage openness in government.
Carter became increasingly involved in national Democratic Party politics. In 1972 he headed the Democratic Governors Campaign Committee, and in 1974 he was chair of the Democratic National Campaign Committee. That same year Carter officially declared his intention to run for president in 1976, even though he was still little known outside the state of Georgia. As late as October 1975 a public opinion poll on possible Democratic candidates did not even list his name. Carter's rise to national prominence began in January 1976 with his intensive and industrious campaigning. By March he was the top choice among Democrats to run for president.
The 1976 election
Carter's success began with a victory in the New Hampshire primary in February. He convinced voters that he would be able to act independently and effectively. In his campaign he also vowed to restore moral leadership to the presidency. After the Watergate incident, when Richard Nixon (1913–1994) stepped down as president rather than face criminal charges, this was what people wanted to hear. Carter was elected on the first ballot at the 1976 Democratic National Convention.
With his running mate, Minnesota Democrat Walter Mondale (1928–), Carter made unemployment a central issue of his campaign, urging the creation of jobs through increased federal spending and the growth of business. Carter promised to reorganize the many offices and departments of the federal government and to develop a national energy policy. He also agreed to pardon those who had refused to fight in the Vietnam War (1955–75; this civil war between South Vietnam, supported by the United States, and the Communist forces of North Vietnam had just ended and was long considered a U.S. failure.) America's involvement through the troubled years took the form of military funds, advisors, and thousands of soldiers.
When Carter defeated Gerald Ford (1913–) in the general election, he became
the first president from the deep South since Zachary Taylor (1784–1850). Carter's victory margin came from African Americans, from those with low incomes, and from others who thought that they were being hurt by the policies of the Ford administration. One of Carter's challenges was to reach out to groups that had not really supported him, such as Catholics and Italian Americans.
His record as president
Carter's presidency began well. Congress approved his plans to dissolve or combine federal agencies that provided similar services and passed legislation aimed at lowering income taxes. In August 1977 his proposal to establish the Department of Energy as a new executive department was adopted. Unfortunately, inflation (a general increase in prices that reduces the value of money) continued to rise during his term, reaching 15 percent by mid-1980. Carter became more unpopular as a result. A July 1980 poll showed that only 21 percent of those responding approved of the job he was doing, the lowest rating recorded for any American president.
Carter's term was also marked by mixed success in foreign affairs. In 1977 he attracted worldwide attention and praise when he cut off United States aid to nations believed to have committed human rights violations. However, two 1977 treaties dealing with the Panama Canal earned him mixed reviews. The treaties promised to give control of the canal to Panama at the end of 1999 and ensured neutrality of the waterway. Carter also helped in the creation of a peace treaty between Israel and Egypt in 1979 at Camp David, Maryland. With Carter as witness, President Anwar el-Sadat (1918–1981) and Prime Minister Menachem Begin (1913–1992) signed a pact that ended war between the two countries.
Carter's most dramatic moments in foreign policy affairs began in November 1979 when a group of students seized the United States embassy in Teheran, Iran, and took fifty-two U.S. citizens captive. When Carter's responses—including stopping all imports from Iran—did not resolve the situation, he ordered an armed rescue in April 1980, which failed and led to the deaths of eight marines. The hostages were finally released on the last day that Carter held office. Carter had run for reelection in 1980, but he was defeated by former California governor Ronald Reagan (1911–) by a wide margin.
After the presidency
Carter has devoted his career since leaving office to trying to achieve peace and help humanity. In 1981 he established the Carter Center, which sponsors a number of programs, including the promotion of human rights in third-world countries and maintaining detailed medical records for local Atlanta children. The Carter Center also monitors elections in newly democratic countries and works to fight disease. In addition to these efforts, Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, have spent their summers volunteering to build housing for the poor through the Habitat for Humanity organization.
Carter remains involved in international relations as well. In 1990 he persuaded Nicaraguan opposition leader Daniel Ortega (1945–) to step down and let an elected president step in. In the early 1990s Carter brought messages from Somali warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid (1934–1996) to President Bill Clinton (1946–) that helped avoid a
military conflict. In June 1994 Carter negotiated with North Korean dictator Kim Il Sung (1912–1994) to freeze his country's nuclear weapons program.
Carter had been criticized for his handling of foreign relations during his presidency, but his tireless work on all kinds of issues since leaving office has earned him great praise. In 1999 Carter was awarded with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest honor for private citizens. In 2002 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his continuing efforts to bring peace to warring countries, to advance human rights, and to promote economic development in poor countries.
For More Information
Carter, Jimmy. The Blood of Abraham: Insights into the Middle East. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1985.
Carter, Jimmy. Keeping Faith: Memoirs of a President. New York: Bantam Books, 1982.
Fink, Gary M. Prelude to the Presidency. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1980.
Morris, Kenneth E. Jimmy Carter: American Moralist. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1996.
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Interview: The Sound Of Silence When Dom Ignace persuaded the Carthusian monks of Parkminster to break their 900-year silence to record an album of their nightly chants, he could not have anticipated the reverberations it would send through his own life.y David Rose
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 12/13/1998; ; 700+ words
; CARTHUSIAN MONKS are not in...daily prayers. The Carthusians are the most contemplative...There are just 450 Carthusian monks and 100 Carthusian...founder of the Carthusian order, St John...prayers from the Carthusians' 900-year...
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Out of Great Silence: a Carthusian interlude.(Spirituality Issue)(An Infinity of Little Hours by Nancy Klein Maguire, Sounds of Silence by Benedict Kossmann and Into Great Silence by Philip Groning)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Commonweal; 2/29/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...books about the Carthusians (An Infinity of...praised film about a Carthusian monastery (Into...interest in the Carthusians is longstanding...a newly founded Carthusian foundation in Vermont...I read that the Carthusians had launched a...the name of the Carthusian property in ...
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'CULT' CHRONICLES SUN PRAIRIE WOMAN SPENDS YEARS LEARNING AND WRITING ABOUT THE CARTHUSIAN MONKS.(DAYBREAK)
Newspaper article from: Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI); 12/16/2006; 700+ words
; ...the eleventh century Carthusians. The equivalent of...nothing about the extreme Carthusian order. The monastery...Some couldn't handle Carthusian life, and either left...were too much. Bad Carthusian singing has also taken...she emphasizes the Carthusians are not men who retreated...
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Studies in Carthusian monasticism in the late Middle Ages.(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 5/1/2009; 515 words
; 9782503516998 Studies in Carthusian monasticism in the late Middle...the twelfth century, the Carthusians were considered to have the...medieval and early modern Carthusian monasteries in Britain and...The final articles are on Carthusian art in Britain and Italy...
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Carthusian complexity. (Carthusian monastery in Seville, Spain)
Magazine article from: The Architectural Review; 2/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; Guillermo Vazquez Consuegra's rejuvenation of a Carthusian monastery in Seville instils a spatial richness and material...that name in the Guadalquivir River, was built as the Carthusian monastery of Santa Maria de las Cuevas. A large complex...
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More Carthusian monks.(LETTERS)(Letter to the editor)
Magazine article from: National Catholic Reporter; 9/1/2006; ; 403 words
; ...in England, was the only English-speaking Carthusian house. The American Carthusian house in Vermont, founded by Verner Moore...a new site near Arlington, Vt. Since the Carthusians shun publicity, it is easy for them to be...
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Monks: Capturing The Sound Of Silence.(documentary film portrays life of Carthusian monks)
Magazine article from: Newsweek; 1/23/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...the French Alps, the monks of the Carthusian Order are considered by some to be...statue, which is on my desk, of a Carthusian in the form of an Oscar." CAPTION...They Trust: Following the lives of Carthusian monks
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Carthusians share tales of isolated life.(RELIGION)(STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN)(Column)
Newspaper article from: The Washington Times (Washington, DC); 8/30/2009; 700+ words
; ...THE WASHINGTON TIMES For several years, a book about the Carthusians, the Catholic Church's most austere monastic order, has...Klein Maguire, a Capitol Hill resident, married an ex-Carthusian monk. A 17th-century scholar-in-residence at the Folger...
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SILENCE IS HEAVENLY FOR CARTHUSIAN MONKS.(Living)(Movie review)
Newspaper article from: The Cincinnati Post (Cincinnati, OH); 6/18/2007; 700+ words
; ...the rhythms of Into the Great Silence, a documentary about Carthusian monks who live in a monastery (called a Charterhouse by the...to live this way constitutes the film's sole wonder. The Carthusian life seems one of addition by subtraction. The rationale...
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Carthusian order's silence speaks volumes in this movie
Newspaper article from: Winnipeg Free Press; 6/4/2007; ; 618 words
; ...you will become attuned to the smallest sounds - wind in treetops, water filling a bowl, the creak of ancient wood. The Carthusian order offers the most ascetic monastic practice in the world. Virtually unchanged since its founding in 1084, by St Bruno...
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Carthusians
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...France in 1084. The Carthusians are peculiar among...more austere. The Carthusian enclosure is called...architectural monument. The Carthusians are devoted mainly...There are a very few Carthusian nuns following a similar...liqueur manufactured by Carthusians in France.
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Carthusian
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
Carthusian. Of or belonging to a religious Order...Italy, and Spain. Good examples of Carthusian monastery-buildings are the Certosa...the Colonia family. In England, a Carthusian establishment was called Charter House...
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Carthusian Order
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Carthusian Order. This strictly contemplative order was founded by St Bruno in...characterized the Order from the beginning. At the end of the 18th cent. the Carthusians suffered badly in the French Revolution, and in 1901 they were again...
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Hugh of Lincoln, St
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to British History
...smallholding at Saint-Maximin. He became a Carthusian in 1160 after visiting the Grand Chartreuse...Henry II to become abbot of the first Carthusian monastery in England at Witham (Som...canonized by Pope Honorius III, the first Carthusian saint. Sandra M. Dunkin
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Ludolf of Saxony
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
...1300–78), also ‘Ludolf the Carthusian ’, spiritual writer. He entered the Dominican Order and was a Master of Theology before he joined the Carthusians in 1340. His chief works are a ‘Commentary...
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