An Overview of John F. Kennedy's Administration
John F. Kennedy won the presidency after a unique
series of television debates with his opponent,
Republican Vice-President Richard M. Nixon. At
43, he was the youngest man ever elected President, and,
at 46, the youngest ever to die in office. He was also
the first Roman Catholic to become President, and the
first President to have been born in the 20th century. As
President, Kennedy greatly increased United States
prestige in 1962 when he turned aside the threat of an
atomic war with Russia while forcing the Russians to
withdraw missiles from Cuba. Under his "New
Frontier" program, the U.S. enjoyed its greatest
prosperity in history. Blacks made greater progress in
their quest for equal rights than at any time since the Civil War. And, as the
result of a promise made by Kennedy in a televised public
address, the United States made its first manned space
flights and prepared to send astronauts to the moon.
Election
of 1960 |
Place of Nominating
Convention |
Los Angeles |
Ballot on Which
Nominated |
1st |
Opponents |
Richard M. Nixon (Republican)
Harry F. Byrd |
Electoral Vote |
303 (Kennedy) to 219 (Nixon) to
15 (Byrd) |
Popular Vote |
34,226,731 (Kennedy) to
34,108,157 (Nixon) |
Age at Inauguration |
43 |
|
|
His
Vice-President and Cabinet |
Vice-President |
Lyndon B.
Johnson |
Secretary of State |
Dean Rusk |
Secretary of the
Treasury |
C. Douglas Dillon |
Secretary of Defense |
Robert S. McNamara |
Attorney General |
Robert F.
Kennedy |
Postmaster General |
J. Edward Day
John A. Gronouski, Jr. (1963) |
Secretary of the
Interior |
Stewart L. Udall |
Secretary of Agriculture |
Orville
L. Freeman |
Secretary of Commerce |
Luther H. Hodges |
Secretary of Labor |
Arthur J. Goldberg
W. Willard Wirtz (1962) |
Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare |
Abraham A. Ribicoff
Anthony J. Celebrezze (1962) |
|
|
Major
Domestic Events of His Administration |
U.S.
population was about 190,417,800 in 1963. |
1961 |
The Peace Corps was launched by
executive order. |
1961 |
The 23rd Amendment gave
residents of the District of Columbia the right
to vote in national elections. |
1961 |
Congress approved an increase in
the minimum hourly wage from $1 to $1.25. |
1961 |
A group of Negro and white freedom
riders entered Montgomery, Alabama, by bus
to test local segregation laws. |
1962 |
Congress passed the Trade
Expansion Act, giving the President wide powers
to cut tariffs. |
1962 |
James Meredith became the first
Negro to enroll at the University of Mississippi. |
1962-1963 |
The Supreme Court ruled official
prayers and Bible reading in public schools
unconstitutional. |
1963 |
The Supreme Court ruled that
states must supply counsel in criminal cases for
individuals who cannot afford it. |
1963 |
Rioting broke out in Birmingham,
Alabama. |
1963 |
Medgar W. Evers, NAACP
field secretary for Mississippi, was assassinated
in Jackson. |
1963 |
The Alabama National Guard was
federalized to enforce the integration of the
University of Alabama. |
1963 |
About 200,000 persons staged a Freedom
March in Washington, D.C., in support of
equal rights for Negroes. |
November 22, 1963 |
President Kennedy was
assassinated in Dallas, Texas. |
|
|
Major
World Events of His Administration |
1961 |
Russian cosmonaut Yuri
Gagarin became the first man to fly in space. |
1961 |
Cuban exiles invaded Cuba at the
Bay of Pigs. |
1961 |
Alan
B. Shepard, Jr., became the first American to
fly in space. |
1961 |
The Berlin
Wall cut off East Berlin from West Berlin. |
1961 |
The U.S. set up the Alliance for
Progress, an aid program for underdeveloped Latin
American countries. |
1961 |
Dag
Hammarskjöld, United Nations Secretary
General, was killed in a plane crash in Africa. |
1962 |
John
H. Glenn, Jr., became the first American to
orbit the earth. |
1962 |
Ez-Nazi Adolf Eichmann was
hanged in Israel for crimes committed prior to
and during World
War II. |
1962 |
Algeria gained its independence
from France. |
1962 |
The U. S. launched Telstar
I, the first satellite to relay television
programs between the U.S. and Europe. |
1962 |
The U. S. and Russia nearly
waged war over the placement of Soviet missiles
in Cuba. |
1963 |
The Atomic Test-Ban Treaty was
signed by the U.S., Russia, and other countries,
banning all except underground nuclear tests. |
1963 |
The U. S. and Russia set up the
"hot-line" direct communication system
between Washington and Moscow. |
1963 |
Military officers in South
Vietnam overthrew and killed President Ngo Dinh
Diem. |
Sources
The American President millercenter.org
Presidents of the United States www.ipl.org
See Also
Richard M. Nixon
Civil War
Lyndon B. Johnson
Robert F. Kennedy
Stewart L. Udall
Orville
L. Freeman
National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People
Yuri
Gagarin
Alan
B. Shepard, Jr.
Berlin
Wall
Dag
Hammarskjöld
John H. Glenn, Jr.
World
War II
Telstar
Cuban Missile Crisis
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