This is a post I wrote on President Jimmy Carter in 2010, when I visited his
birthplace in Georgia. Yesterday, Mr. Carter celebrated his 97th birthday. He is our longest lived
ex- President.
Mr. Carter still lives outside Americus, Georgia in a modest house on a family
compound. He taught Sunday School until last year. He has been active in Habitat for Humanity for many years, helping to build over 4300 houses.
More recently (2015), Carter has been treated for melanoma that spread into his brain. He also has an extensive history of pancreatic cancer, the cancer that Jeopardy host Alex Trebek bravely battled before his death in 2020.
Whether or not you supported Carter when he was President, I think you would admit that he's had quite a life of accomplishment after leaving office in 1981. Here are some fun facts about him.
Here's my 2010 post. I've reposted it a number of times - in fact, it may be my #1 reposted post.
They called him....
The Peanut President
What in his upbringing, what in his childhood values, what in his education made this man?
And why has this area of Georgia grown organizations such as Habitat for Humanity and others? What here was so special?
We are visiting the Americus/Plains area to find out. In this blog entry I am concentrating on Jimmy Carter the man.
This is the house that Jimmy Carter grew up in.
Jimmy Carter grew up outside of Plains, GA in a solidly middle class family. The actual town, which no longer exists, was called Archery. The realities of rural life in those days created a childhood of lots of hard physical labor. His father, loving as he was, did not believe in keeping anything on the farm that did not "pay its own way". And this was hard farming, although the Carters were rich enough to have tenant farmers. Still, Jimmy worked side by side with area black farmers, performing distasteful chores such as "mopping cotton".
"Miss Lillian", Jimmy's mother, was a nurse who did not turn anyone away, black or white.
Jimmy's father encouraged Jimmy to work and play alongside of the local black farmers.
The Carters grew cotton, peanuts, and sugar cane. Student farmers still raise these crops at the homestead today. They kept goats for meat, and mules to plow the fields.
In this windmill, is the germ of using "alternate energy". There is nothing new about windpower.
The Plains High School the Carters attended has been closed (as part of consolidating various school districts). This is a classroom set up the way it would have looked for Jimmy Carter in the 7th grade. Like so many famous people, Jimmy Carter credits a high school teacher, Miss Julia Coleman, as another great influence on his life. In 1940 Eleanor Roosevelt invited her to the White House to honor her. I highly recommend reading about her life.
This is the outside of the high school.
Plains was the "Big City" for Jimmy Carter. This is what it looks like today:
Jimmy Carter lives just outside of Plains today, and when he is in town, teaches Sunday School at his church. This is Jimmy Carter's "Church Home".
When we had first planned our trip, Mr. Carter was not supposed to be in town but this has since changed. We weren't able to change our plans but it certainly would have been interesting.
So, Mr. Carter - we wish you many years of quality life to come.
He’s much better as an elder statesman than he was as president.
ReplyDeleteAgreed.
Delete...an amazing and humble man.
ReplyDeleteI've attended one of his Sunday school classes. He is quite devote and serious about his ministry. Being from Georgia, I have a lot of local pride for him too. Yet, I have never toured everything in Plains and I live just under 60 miles away. My family is not that ambulatory and it is so expensive to get someone to stay for just the day.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I saw it was his birthday. I start to panic a bit when I hear his name in the news nowadays.
ReplyDeleteIt also wonderful that he and his wife celebrated over 75 years of marriage. Sad he only was one term president.
ReplyDeleteCoffee is on and stay safe
I’ve always thought the world of Jimmy Carter!
ReplyDeleteSo often, I see wonderful people who, because they love to serve, enter politics. The political scene eats them alive. I think you have to have certain qualities to survive in that climate. I watched it happen with a man who was our Alberta Premier. Ed Stelmach was a super nice guy. And he was just chewed up and spat out. It was pretty sad.