Current:Home > MarketsJimmy Carter and hometown of Plains celebrate the 39th president’s 100th birthday -TradeBridge
Jimmy Carter and hometown of Plains celebrate the 39th president’s 100th birthday
View
Date:2025-04-18 03:36:35
ATLANTA (AP) — Jimmy Carter is preparing to celebrate his 100th birthday on Tuesday, the first time an American president has lived a full century and the latest milestone in a life that took the son of a Depression-era farmer to the White House and across the world as a Nobel Peace Prize-winning humanitarian and advocate for democracy.
Living the last 19 months in home hospice care in Plains, the Georgia Democrat and 39th president has continued to defy expectations, just as he did through a remarkable rise from his family peanut farming and warehouse business to the world stage. He served one presidential term from 1977 to 1981 and then worked more than four decades leading The Carter Center, which he and his wife Rosalynn co-founded in 1982 to “wage peace, fight disease, and build hope.”
“Not everybody gets 100 years on this earth, and when somebody does, and when they use that time to do so much good for so many people, it’s worth celebrating,” Jason Carter, the former president’s grandson and chair of The Carter Center governing board, said in an interview.
“These last few months, 19 months, now that he’s been in hospice, it’s been a chance for our family to reflect,” he continued, “and then for the rest of the country and the world to really reflect on him. That’s been a really gratifying time.”
The former president was born Oct. 1, 1924 in Plains, where he has lived more than 80 of his 100 years. He is expected to mark his birthday in the same one-story home he and Rosalynn built in the early 1960s — before his first election to the Georgia state Senate. The former first lady, who was also born in Plains, died last November at 96.
The Carter Center on Sept. 17 hosted a musical gala in Atlanta to celebrate the former president with a range of genres and artists, including some who campaigned with him in 1976. The event raised more than $1.2 million for the center’s programs and will be broadcast Tuesday evening on Georgia Public Broadcasting.
In St. Paul, Minnesota, Habitat for Humanity volunteers are honoring Carter with a five-day effort to build 30 houses. The Carters became top ambassadors for the international organization after leaving the White House and hosted annual building projects into their 90s. Carter survived a cancer diagnosis at age 90, then several falls and a hip replacement in his mid-90s before announcing at 98 that he would enter hospice care.
Townspeople in Plains planned another concert Tuesday evening.
The last time Jimmy Carter was seen publicly was nearly a year ago, using a reclining wheelchair to attend his wife’s two funeral services. Visibly diminished and silent, he was joined on the front row of Glenn Memorial United Methodist Church in Atlanta by the couple’s four children, every living former first lady, President Joe Biden and his wife Jill and former President Bill Clinton. A day later, Carter joined his extended family and parishioners at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, where the former president taught Sunday School for decades.
Jason Carter said the 100th birthday celebrations were not something the family expected to see once his grandmother died. The former president’s hospital bed had been set up in the same room so he could see his wife of 77 years and talk to her in her final days and hours.
“We frankly didn’t think he was going to go on much longer,” Jason Cater said. “But it’s a faith journey for him, and he’s really given himself over to what he feels is God’s plan. He knows he’s not in charge. But in these last few months, especially, he has gotten a lot more engaged in world events, a lot more engaged in politics, a lot more, just engaged, emotionally, with all of us.”
Jason Carter said the centenarian president, born only four years after women were granted the constitutional right to vote and four decades before Black women won ballot access, is eager to cast his 2024 presidential ballot — for Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democrat who wants to become the first woman, second Black person and first person of south Asian descent to reach the Oval Office.
“He, like a lot of us, was incredibly gratified by his friend Joe Biden’s courageous choice to pass the torch,” the younger Carter said. “You know, my grandfather and The Carter Center have observed more than 100 elections in 40 other countries, right? So, he knows how rare it is for somebody who’s a sitting president to give up power in any context.”
Jason Carter continued, “When we started asking him about his 100th birthday, he said he was excited to vote for Kamala Harris.”
Early voting in Georgia begins Oct. 15, two weeks into James Earl Carter Jr.'s 101st year.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Travis Kelce is aware his stats improve whenever Taylor Swift attends Chiefs' games
- US Judge Biggers, who ruled on funding for Black universities in Mississippi, dies at 88
- UAW appears to be moving toward a potential deal with Ford that could end strike
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Nashville police chief's son, wanted in police officers shooting, found dead: 'A tragic end'
- Diamondbacks shock Phillies in NLCS Game 7, advance to first World Series since 2001
- Some companies using lots of water want to be more sustainable. Few are close to their targets
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- China replaces defense minister, out of public view for 2 months, with little explanation
Ranking
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Richard Roundtree, 'Shaft' action hero and 'Roots' star, dies at 81 from pancreatic cancer
- US Judge Biggers, who ruled on funding for Black universities in Mississippi, dies at 88
- USPS touts crackdown on postal crime, carrier robberies, with hundreds of arrests
- Average rate on 30
- Olympic Skater Țara Lipinski Welcomes Baby With Husband Todd Kapostasy Via Surrogate
- Loyalty above all: Removal of top Chinese officials seen as enforcing Xi’s demand for obedience
- Tom Emmer withdraws bid for House speaker hours after winning nomination, leaving new cycle of chaos
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
‘Shaft’ star Richard Roundtree, considered the ‘first Black action’ movie hero, has died at 81
Hyundai is rapidly building its first US electric vehicle plant, with production on track for 2025
Tiny deer and rising seas: How climate change is testing the Endangered Species Act
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Watch 'Dancing with the Stars' pros pay emotional tribute to late judge Len Goodman
Michael Cohen’s testimony will resume in the Donald Trump business fraud lawsuit in New York
Immigrants are coming to North Dakota for jobs. Not everyone is glad to see them