Chattanooga Times Free Press

Carter Presidenti­al Center is home to archives and activism

- BY NANCY CLANTON THE ATLANTA JOURNALCON­STITUTION (TNS)

ATLANTA — The Carter Center and Jimmy Carter Presidenti­al Library and Museum — collective­ly known as the Carter Presidenti­al Center — have been a cornerston­e of Atlanta’s history since their establishm­ent in the 1980s.

Located in the PonceyHigh­land neighborho­od, just east of downtown, the center is easily accessible from the Downtown Connector.

While the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum joins the long-line of presidenti­al libraries going back to Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt, the Carter Center next door is a unique expression of the Carters’ desire to continue working for peace, fighting disease and building hope.

JIMMY CARTER LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

As part of the presidenti­al libraries system, the Jimmy Carter Presidenti­al Library is administer­ed by the National Archives and Records Administra­tion, a federal agency, and is the official repository of Carter’s presidenti­al papers. As such, researcher­s can request an appointmen­t to see the 39th president’s official papers, donated historical papers, White House staff stories and more. The library and museum also conduct student tours and offer educationa­l opportunit­ies for teachers.

The museum houses almost 70,000 square feet of space, including more than 15,000 square feet of exhibit space, and everything from gifts given to the Carters by world leaders to photos and videos from the their time as the nation’s first couple.

In addition to a walkthroug­h cabin resembling the Camp David meeting rooms, there is a life-size replica of the Oval Office furnished exactly as it was during Carter’s administra­tion. “The room was painted off-white in December 1974 at which time the salmon, gold, and green upholstery and drapery colors were selected,” according to the website.

CARTER CENTER

The Carter Center is a not-for-profit organizati­on founded by the Carters in 1982 to facilitate their post-presidenti­al work “on a fundamenta­l commitment to human rights and the alleviatio­n of human suffering.” Although the Carter Center employs about 200 people at its Atlanta headquarte­rs, there are thousands working around the world to encourage peace and fight disease.

According to the center’s website, it has monitored elections in 39 countries, as well as here at home. As the younger generation guides the center into the future, current leadership, through a statement calling for an end to excessive police force, has issued “a clear signal that the center, with its long internatio­nal shadow, would be wading more deeply into domestic matters,” Ernie Suggs wrote on the center’s 40th anniversar­y.

The center focuses its health fight on six preventabl­e diseases — Guinea worm, river blindness, trachoma, schistosom­iasis, lymphatic filariasis and malaria in Hispaniola — “by using health education and simple, low-cost methods.”

“We believe access to health care is a human right, especially among poor people afflicted with disease who are forgotten, ignored, and often without hope. Just to know that someone cares about them not only can ease their physical pain but also remove an element of alienation and anger that can lead to hatred and violence,” the website quotes the former president as saying.

Mental health is also important to the Carters, with former first lady Rosalynn Carter leading the center’s mental health program.

GARDENS

The Carter Presidenti­al Center’s 35-acre park includes two lakes, a koi pond, sculptures and gardens. The Japanese Garden, designed by master gardener Kinsaku Nakane and donated by YKK Corp., contains azaleas and Japanese maples. There are two waterfalls in the garden — the larger of which represents the former president and the smaller of which represents his bride of nearly 77 years.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS ?? The Carter Center in Atlanta is seen Sept. 22.
HYOSUB SHIN/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON/TNS The Carter Center in Atlanta is seen Sept. 22.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States