John Kennedy
On
November
22, 1963
,
when he was hardly past his first thousand days in
office, John Fitzgerald Kennedy was killed by an
assassin's bullets as his motorcade wound through
Dallas
,
Texas
.
Kennedy was the youngest man elected President; he was
the youngest to die.
Of
Italian and Irish descent, he was born in
Brookline
,
Massachusetts
,
on
May
29, 1917
.
Graduating from Harvard in 1940, he entered the Navy.
In 1943, when his PT boat was rammed and sunk by a
Japanese destroyer, Kennedy, despite grave injuries,
led the survivors through perilous waters to safety.
Back
from the war, he became a Democratic Congressman from
the Boston area, advancing in 1953 to the Senate. He
married Jacqueline Bouvier
on September 12, 1953. In 1955, while recuperating
from a back operation, he wrote Profiles in Courage,
which won the Pulitzer Prize in history.
In
1956 Kennedy almost gained the Democratic nomination
for Vice President, and four years later was a
first-ballot nominee for President. Millions watched
his television debates with the Republican candidate,
Richard M. Nixon. Winning by a narrow margin in the
popular vote, Kennedy became the first Roman Catholic
President.
His
Inaugural Address offered the memorable injunction:
"Ask not what your country can do for you--ask
what you can do for your country." As President,
he set out to redeem his campaign pledge to get
America moving again. His economic programs launched
the country on its longest sustained expansion since
World War II; before his death, he laid plans for a
massive assault on persisting pockets of privation and
poverty.
Responding
to ever more urgent demands, he took vigorous action
in the cause of equal rights, calling for new civil
rights legislation. His vision of America extended to
the quality of the national culture and the central
role of the arts in a vital society.
He
wished America to resume its old mission as the first
nation dedicated to the revolution of human rights.
With the Alliance for Progress and the Peace Corps, he
brought American idealism to the aid of developing
nations. But the hard reality of the Communist
challenge remained.
Shortly
after his inauguration, Kennedy permitted a band of
Cuban exiles, already armed and trained, to invade
their homeland. The attempt to overthrow the regime of
Fidel Castro was a failure. Soon thereafter, the
Soviet Union renewed its campaign against West Berlin.
Kennedy replied by reinforcing the Berlin garrison and
increasing the Nation's military strength, including
new efforts in outer space. Confronted by this
reaction, Moscow, after the erection of the Berlin
Wall, relaxed its pressure in central Europe.
Instead,
the Russians now sought to install nuclear missiles in
Cuba. When this was discovered by air reconnaissance
in October 1962, Kennedy imposed a
quarantine on all offensive weapons bound for
Cuba. While the world trembled on the brink of nuclear
war, the Russians backed down and agreed to take the
missiles away. The American response to the Cuban
crisis evidently persuaded Moscow of the futility of
nuclear blackmail.
Kennedy
now contended that both sides had a vital interest in
stopping the spread of nuclear weapons and slowing the
arms race--a contention which led to the test ban
treaty of 1963. The months after the Cuban crisis
showed significant progress toward his goal of "a
world of law and free choice, banishing the world of
war and coercion." His administration thus saw
the beginning of new hope for both the equal rights of
Americans and the peace of the world.
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