Short, humorous stories about people
in politics, history, and the arts.
Short, humorous stories about people
in politics, history, and the arts.
John Fitzgerald Kennedy
(191763)
Anecdote 1...
In 1962, when Kennedy was President, he arranged a White House dinner for a group of intellectuals, most of them Nobel Prize winners in their respective fields. He welcomed them with a short speech, during which hem said, "There has never been such a collection of talent and intellect gathered in this room since Thomas Jefferson dined here alone."
Anecdote 2...
During World War II Kennedy held a commission in the U.S. navy and served in the Pacific. In August 1943 in Blackett Strait in the Solomon Islands, a Japanese destroyer rammed his ship. Kennedy, with some others, reached a nearby island but found it was held by the Japanese. He and another officer then swam to another island, where they persuaded the inhabitants to send a message to other U.S. forces, who rescued them. Kennedy's comment on his reputation as a hero: "It was involuntary. They sank my boat."
Anecdote 3...
Kennedy enjoyed telling this story against himself. He said that during an election campaign his father sent him the following telegram: "Don't buy a single vote more than necessary. I'll be damned if I'm going to pay for a landslide."
Read an anecdote about Kennedy's father, Joseph P. Kennedy.
Biographical Note...
35th president of the United States (1961-63). The first Roman Catholic to become president, Kennedy made a great impact on the nation before he was assassinated in 1963.
More Information...
READ a short biography of John Kennedy.