Jimmy Carter Research Paper

912 Words2 Pages

James (Jimmy) Earl Carter Carter was born on October 1, 1924 in Plains, Georgia. In his early life he lived without electricity or indoor plumbing. Carter’s home was a wooden clapboard house beside a long dirt road that led from Savannah to Columbus, Georgia. Carter’s hobbies included fly fishing and whittling wood when he was not at work on his parents’ peanut farm. (Wade, 1989) Military duty took up a large portion of his life, as before he was even enrolled in school Carter knew he wanted to serve in the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. Carter feared two things: Malocclusion of teeth and retention of urine, his reason being his teeth were not perfectly aligned and he always had a drop left when he urinated and he thought this would keep …show more content…

While he worked on the farm he was also active in politics, was a deacon in his church, and fought for human rights. Carter had a personal relationship with the citizens in his town, white or black he treated them all the same. Carter was an outspoken critic of segregation and worked for the equality of African Americans. When Carter ran for governor his wife, Rosalynn Carter, became an extremely effective campaigner on her own. (Gobold, 2010). After a Convention in 1972, Carter began to strongly consider a presidential campaign. Carter discussed his strong points and weak points with his friends, family, and staff. Some of the topics they discussed were him being a farmer, being from the deep south, his small town roots, distance from national news media, his strong belief in sticking to what he thought was right and not compromising, and his lack of finances. (Carter, 1975). In a close race, Carter won the presidential election in …show more content…

His vice president was Walter Mondale. Carter started an organization that built houses for people in need. He also launched a two tier program stimulating domestic production of oil and natural gas which decreased the United States’ Dependency upon OPEC. During his presidency he lifted travel bans from Cuba and North Korea. He also extended full diplomatic recognition to China despite its poor treatment of Tibet. In November of 1971 the American embassy in Tehran was taken by followers of the Ayatollah Khomeini and 63 Americans were taken hostage. Carter proved to be insufficient to change matters in this crisis which resulted in his approval ratings greatly dropping to the lowest of any modern president. Middle Eastern countries greatly raised their oil prices during the time Carter was president and this made the voters very unhappy that he could not change the prices. (Barden,

More about Jimmy Carter Research Paper

Open Document