Jimmy Carter was the perfect candidate for 1976, columnist George Skelton writes, and he was an exceptional ex-president. In between? That's the problem.
National Geographic photographer Jodi Cobb took a detour into the town of Plains, Georgia—and found a town giddy with the ...
Something about his interaction with the late U.S. President Jimmy Carter at a 10K road race in Maryland back in September 1979, left an uneasy feeling with Louisville’s Bruce Kirschner.
Jimmy Carter, the 39th president of the United States who served from 1977–81, has died at the age of 100. He left his mark on American history and world affairs—and on the history of running.
Jimmy Carter was the only prominent white man in ... Just days before the all-important Democratic primary in 1962, Carter decided to run for the state Senate. He ran not only against a ...
As a legislator, governor, president and ex-president, he confronted the prejudices that were so much a part of where and ...
The route also included the old train depot that served as Jimmy Carter's 1976 presidential campaign headquarters and the gas station once run by Carter's younger brother Billy. The motorcade passed ...
“My name is Jimmy Carter and I’m running for president. I’d like to introduce you to my friends, the Allman Brothers.” “Carter had become friends with the Allman Brothers, and he saw it ...
Meanwhile, in south Georgia, another Democrat was plotting his first run for political office: Jimmy Carter had his eye on the state Senate. “One of the reasons Carter said he got into that race ...
A number of central Ohioans who worked and campaigned for former President Jimmy Carter have fond memories of him.
Jimmy Carter grew up on his family's peanut farm in Archery, Georgia Carter lived at the farm from the age of 4 until he departed for college in 1941. Carter's family didn't have running water ...