John F. Kennedy inauguration
President John F. Kennedy's inauguration was 50 years ago today. His short inaugural address -- it's rumored to have been the shortest ever inspired scores of Americans to enter politics, government or the Peace Corps, with its famous challenge to Americans near the conclusion:"Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country."
Historians regard it as among the nation's three or four finest inaugural addresses. We'll look back at those in this slide show, along with JFK's speech on that frigid day and the attendees of the inauguration.
Speechwriter  Ted Sorensen
Speechwriter  Ted Sorensen
Ted  Sorensen was Kennedy's longtime aide and a gifted speechwriter.  Some scholars say the speech was a true collaboration between the two  men, with Kennedy himself inserting many of the lines that have become  famous. 
For example, Kennedy's clarion call to  "let the world go forth" had been used in a speech he gave in 1956. 
Eisenhower  & other presidents who attended
Eisenhower  & other presidents who attended
The inauguration, held outdoors  in freezing weather was attended by six past and future presidents:  
- Kennedy
 - Dwight D. Eisenhower
 - Harry Truman
 - Lyndon B. Johnson
 - Richard M. Nixon
 - Gerald Ford, then a Republican congressman from Michigan
 - A seventh, Herbert Hoover, had a seat reserved, but his flight was canceled for snow.
 
While  some of these politicians have given great speeches, Kennedy's  inaugural address is on par with three of the greatest, from Abraham  Lincoln, Thomas  Jefferson and Franklin  D. Roosevelt.
Abraham  Lincoln's inaugural address
Abraham  Lincoln's inaugural address
Date: March 4,  1861
The inaugural address of our 16th  president is regarded as one of the best ever. On the eve of the Civil War,  just after several Southern states had seceded from the Union, he said:
"The  mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot  grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land,  will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely  they will be, by the better angels of our nature."
Thomas  Jefferson's inaugural address
Thomas  Jefferson's inaugural address
Date: March 4,  1801
The third  president gave a memorable inauguration speech, too. One of the  most famous quotes from it is this:
"A wise  and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring one  another, shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits  of industry and improvement."
Franklin  D. Roosevelt's famous speech
Franklin  D. Roosevelt's famous speech
Date: March 4,  1933
The country's 31st  president's speech has gone down in history as one of the best. One  of the most quoted lines is this:
"… the only  thing we have to fear is fear itself -- nameless, unreasoning,  unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat  into advance."
Joseph  P. Kennedy Sr.
Joseph  P. Kennedy Sr.
The father of JFK, Joseph P.  Kennedy, was in attendance. The prominent businessman also worked in  politics. He held two major roles.
John  Steinbeck
John  Steinbeck
John  Steinbeck, the iconic author of several classics, was there, too. He  is the winner of both the Pulitzer Prize and the Nobel Prize for  Literature.
James  Michener
James  Michener
Prize-winning author James  Michener was in attendance. He won the 1948 Pulitzer Prize for a  series of short stories about World  War II. 
Henry  Luce & Clare Boothe Luce
Henry  Luce & Clare Boothe Luce
Clare  Boothe Luce was a playwright, journalist, editor and socialite who  also held political office. Which  one?
Her husband, Henry Luce, was the creator  of several iconic publications, including Time, Life, Fortune and  Sports Illustrated. Author Alan Brinkley wrote a  biography about Luce, released in 2010. 
Robert  Frost
Robert  Frost
Poet Robert  Frost was there. He won multiple Pulitzer Prizes for Poetry.











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