Carter’s state funeral is a six-day series of events allowing Georgians and the nation to pay their respects to the 39th U.S. president.
Jimmy Carter has a total number of four children with Rosalynn Carter, the youngest being their only daughter, Amy Carter. Here's how old she is now.
Carter, at 100 the nation’s longest living president, died Dec. 29 at his home in Plains. The scene this week in Washington, at the National Cathedral Thursday and as he was lying in state for three days at the Capitol, was unlike anything the country had seen in years.
Former President Jimmy Carter will lie here in repose under ceremonial guard 24 hours a day until 6 a.m. on Tuesday, so you can come at any time on Monday, day or night.
Jason Carter was funny and sincere when giving the eulogy at his grandfather's funeral on Thursday. Check out the speech and some of his best quotes.
President Jimmy Carter has been lying in repose at the Carter Center since Saturday evening. ATLANTA — More than 10,000 people have come through the doors of the Carter Center in Atlanta to pay tribute to President Jimmy Carter since he began lying in repose Saturday evening, the organization said.
It also rents out space for events. However, near the Carter Center is the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum, which is open to the public 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday. General admission tickets are $12. Those 16 and younger get in free ...
Jimmy Carter—the 39th president of the United States, who died on Dec. 29 at 100—was laid to rest at the Georgia home he shared with wife Rosalynn Carter.
The last president to declare an energy emergency was Jimmy Carter, who in 1977 called U.S. efforts to confront a domestic energy crisis the “moral equivalent of war.” Carter famously wore a sweater in another 1977 speech in which he stressed conservation to combat energy shortages.
Jason Carter delivered a heartfelt eulogy for his grandfather, former President Jimmy Carter, during a ceremony on Saturday.
The six-day state funeral begins in Georgia, continuing to Washington, D.C. and finally interring Carter in the town he called his home, Plains.