Topic 11
John F. Kennedy
A. Life before the presidency
1. John Fitzgerald Kennedy was the nation’s first
President born in the 20th century (1917). Both parents (Joseph P. Kennedy and
Rose Fitzgerald) were from
2. For John, this privileged childhood was interrupted
repeatedly by chronic bouts of illness.
First, scarlet fever at age 3, followed by frequent bouts of colitis as he grew
older. Doctors beginning to experiment with the treatment of this illness with
steroids (placed under the skin). Side-effect: degeneration in the vertebra in
the lower part of his back and was afflicted with a bad back for the remainder
of his life. (All of these ailments, however, did nothing, however, to stifle
his libido!)
In 1938, on the eve of the Second World War, President Franklin D. Roosevelt
appointed Joseph P. Kennedy, John’s father, to the key post of ambassador to
the
3. World War II Military Service
After Kennedy graduated from Harvard, the
Naval
career almost ended through his relationship with Inga Arvad. Transferred to
4. He was eventually admitted and assigned to serve in
the South Pacific, commanding a small motor-torpedo boat, or “PT boat.” Kennedy
and his crew participated in the campaign to wrest thousands of islands from
Japanese control. In August 1943, as the sailors were sleeping without posting
a watch (in violation of naval regulations), his boat, PT 109, was rammed by a
Japanese destroyer. Towing a badly burned crewmate by a life-jacket strap
clenched in his teeth, Kennedy led the crew's ten survivors on a three-mile
swim to refuge on a tiny island. The crew hid on the island from the enemy for
days until Kennedy managed to summon help. Widely credited with the rescue of
his crew, Kennedy received the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps Medal for Valor, and
a Purple Heart for injuries he sustained. Nevertheless, he returned home to a
naval inquiry on the sinking. Although a board found evidence of poor
seamanship, the Navy needed heroes more than it needed scapegoats, and Kennedy
was cast as the former to build public morale, and recruited to go on speaking
tours.
The war ended in 1945, but not without a deep cost to the Kennedy family: the
oldest son, Joseph Jr., a pilot, was killed on a bombing mission in
5. The Political Climb
After being discharged from the Navy, John Kennedy worked briefly as a reporter
for the Hearst newspapers, considered the idea of going to law school, but in
1946, at the age of twenty-nine, Kennedy won election to the U.S. Congress
representing a working-class
That
same year, he met Jacqueline Bouvier
at a dinner party, and, as he later put it, “leaned across the asparagus and
asked her for a date.” The two were married a year later and while the public
image was one of a happy couple, there were strains in part because of his
continued womanizing. Eventually they had three children, Caroline, John, Jr.
and Patrick Bouvier who died shortly after his birth in August 1963.
Kennedy continued to be dogged by poor health. Left thin and sallow by malaria
brought home from the war in the Pacific, he also suffered from Addison’s disease, which many doctors
considered terminal. He relied on a steady stream of painkillers and steroids
to treat the symptoms of his many ailments. Constant back pain would prevent
him from lifting even his own small children. Ironically, though, Kennedy’s
public image was one of youth, health,
and vigor. And while recovering from back surgery in 1954, Kennedy put his
convalescence from to productive use by writing (with the help of Theodore
Sorensen) Profiles in Courage, a book
about
Due to his continuing poor health, Kennedy had one of the worst attendance
records in Congress. His real achievements in the Senate were few, but almost
immediately after election he began angling for even higher office. In 1956, he
mounted a serious quest for the vice presidential spot alongside presidential
hopeful Adlai Stevenson. He narrowly lost the spot to Estes Kefauver, a better-known
senator from
Reelected
to the Senate in 1958, Kennedy became a member of its influential Foreign
Relations Committee, which he used as a platform to attack President
Eisenhower's diplomatic and military policies, claiming that the
6. Nomination and election: the great question at that time
was can a Roman Catholic be elected president? Outcome of the election
indicated that the answer was “yes”, though at that time, just barely.
B. Domestic Affairs: The New
Frontier
–
Tax cuts as a way of
encouraging economic growth (provided the federal budget remained balanced or
at least nearly balanced)
–
A Medicare program for
the elderly
–
Increased federal
spending on education, including federal loans to parochial schools
–
A federal program to
rebuild the inner cities
–
Increase in the minimum
wage - $1/1.25 hour
–
Increased support for
the space program with the goal of placing a man on the moon by the end of the
decade.
–
Minimum wage increased
$1.00 up to $1.25/hour – Sam Rayburn’s last legislative accomplishment. Rayburn
played a major role in pushing the legislation through Congress. Shortly after
that, suffering from cancer, Rayburn returned home to
–
Peace Corps – 1961 –
Sent volunteers to developing countries to help in fields such as education,
farming, health care etc. JFK insisted that the
–
The space program. To
millions of Americans leadership in the space race was a way of promoting the
nation’s image as the world’s leader in science. Consequently, NASA (established
in 1958) got virtually everything it wanted during the decade, and after
approximately $25 billion had been spent on the program, Americans landed on
the moon in July 1969. Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were the first Americans
on the moon.
C. Foreign Affairs: A mixture of
failure, success, and uncertainty:
–
Plans for the invasion
started under Eisenhower.
–
Reluctantly JFK let
them continue. Invasion force trained by the
–
April 17 – Invasion
began and everything went wrong; landing craft got stuck on coral reefs and
ship carrying radio equipment and ammunition reserves sunk the first day by
Cuban Air Force.
–
Was no way this force
of 1,400 could succeed unless there was a rebellion in
–
Castro’s forces easily
defeated the invaders: 114 killed and most of the others taken captive.
–
Captives released in
1962 in exchange for $50 million in food and drugs.
–
JFK was widely
criticized for not allowing American military intervention on their side. But
Eisenhower had opposed direct American involvement, too.
–
Whole scheme hatched by
the
–
August 1961 –
Construction of the
– Some wanted JFK to try to knock it down, but it was on East German territory and that would have meant war. Once the wall was up and the flow of refugees from East to