Chattanooga Times Free Press

Carter’s hometown shares love, respect for ‘Mr. Jimmy’

- BY GREG BLUESTEIN

“To me, he’s a friend. To a lot of us here, he’s just a churchgoer that sits on the same pews.” — ZAC STEELE, A LAY LEADER OF MARANATHA BAPTIST CHURCH

PLAINS, Ga. — To folks outside of Jimmy Carter’s beloved hometown, he’s the famed peanut farmer-turned politician who is the longest-living president in U.S. history. But the people of Plains know him as something else: the neighbor and friend they simply call “Mr. Jimmy.”

About everyone in this town of barely 500 people has a story about Carter, who was born and raised in this southwest Georgia community, and is preparing to spend his final days in hospice at the humble home he has shared there with his wife Rosalynn since 1961.

“To me, he’s a friend. To a lot of us here, he’s just a churchgoer that sits on the same pews,” said Zac Steele, one of the lay leaders of Maranatha Baptist Church, the congregati­on where Carter long taught Sunday school lessons until his health declined.

For the last half-century, the people there love to tell visitors they have a pair of famous exports: peanuts and a peanut farmer-turned-president.

The local airport is named in his honor, and his boyhood farm and his colorful brother’s gas station have been turned into bona fide tourist attraction­s. The high school Carter and Rosalynn attended is a national historic site. A red-white-andblue sign reminds tourists they’ve entered the home of “Our 39th President.”

Locals see him as one of their own because, well, he is. He presided for years over the town’s annual Peanut Parade from the balcony of the Plains Historic Inn, cheerfully handing out awards to the proud farmers showing off their antique tractors.

He rarely missed a board meeting of the Plains Better Hometown Program or milestone shows at the elegant Rylander Theatre in Americus, Georgia.

His regular Sunday school lessons at Maranatha brought visitors from across the planet — some who camped out for nights in the church parking lot to assure themselves a place in the pews. Afterwards, he delighted in snapping pictures with his visitors.

“My doctor tells me I have to sit during photograph­s,” he told one of the last groups to partake in his lesson. “Please don’t take my sitting to mean that I think I’m better than you.”

HOT DOGS AND WINE

Longtime residents recounted stories of Carter dropping by the local ice cream parlor for dessert or swinging by a coffee shop to chat up patrons.

A former lifeguard told the story of how he once blew the whistle at a group horse-playing in the town’s public pool — only to realize all the splashing came from Carter as he tried to dunk a Secret Service agent.

“He’s part of the fabric of the community. And he immerses himself here. He and Rosalynn are omnipresen­t in this town,” said Evan Kutzler, a history professor who met the Carters shortly after moving to Plains in 2015.

They soon shared a meal of hotdogs and wine together, engaging in a discussion not about weighty global problems but of their shared childhood joy of searching for arrowheads.

Still, Kutzler said, despite their friendship he could never call Carter “Mr. Jimmy.”

That honorific, he said, “belongs to those who actually grew up here.”

‘THE BEST’

After Carter publicly disclosed his battle with melanoma cancer in 2015, he and Rosalynn scaled back a busy regimen of internatio­nal trips observing elections and meeting with heads of state to return to his hometown for his final campaign.

And the people of Plains rallied around their ailing native son, showering him with support — “Jimmy Carter: Cancer Survivor” signs sprouted up on lawns across town — and some much-needed tough love.

Consider the scene at Buffalo Café when Carter said he still planned to visit Nepal despite his cancer treatment. Friends gathered at the downtown Plains eatery to watch the news conference on TV cried out “No!” in dismay, protective of their neighbor.

Indeed, many worried that the monotony of Plains would bore Carter, even though they knew he’d bide his time fishing in local creeks, taking walks in the woods, swimming at the lap pool in his backyard and entertaini­ng visitors.

His friends say he did just that, defying illness as he outlived two of his successors and his vice president after leaving the White House in 1981 and moving back to Plains. But time took its toll. After surviving a cancerous melanoma that spread from his liver to his brain, Carter suffered several falls in 2019 that required hospitaliz­ation. He largely receded from public life as his health worsened.

At Maranatha on Sunday, congregant­s tried to come to terms with the impending farewell.

“Think about the legacy he’s got. It’s mind-boggling to think of the things people are going to remember,” Carter’s niece Kim Fuller said to the congregati­on.

“It’s going to be hard but I know as well as I know my name that he’s going to be gracious. He’s going to be kind. And he’s not going to want the people around him to suffer.”

Jan Williams once helped coordinate the hundreds of visitors who flocked to the small church each weekend Carter planned a lesson. Now, she’s readying to say an inevitable goodbye to a friend who also happens to be a former president.

“If you were his friend, you were so blessed. And if he were your friend, it was a greater blessing. There’s nothing bad about the man that I could ever say. He cared about the people of Plains tremendous­ly.”

She knew this day was coming, but it doesn’t make it easier. The church choir, she said, has been preparing to sing a hymn called “The Best” for weeks. She wishes it was ready for this Sunday.

“Because I certainly think President Carter has given his best.”

 ?? ARVIN TEMKAR / ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? On Sunday, a person walks past stores on Main Street in Plains, Ga.
ARVIN TEMKAR / ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON On Sunday, a person walks past stores on Main Street in Plains, Ga.

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