JFK: The Last Speech

JFK: The  Last Speech President Kennedy spoke of Robert Frost and poetry in his "most majestic" speech made 27 days before

Glorious, inspiring performance of JFK: The Last Speech by the National Symphony, October 26, 2023
10/29/2023

Glorious, inspiring performance of JFK: The Last Speech by the National Symphony, October 26, 2023

10/06/2023

JFK: The Last Speech symphony will be performed by the Dallas Symphony Orchestra on October 6-7-8, 2023. Congratulations!

A centerpiece of the National Symphony Orchestra's mission is its commitment to new works by many of today's leading com...
03/18/2023

A centerpiece of the National Symphony Orchestra's mission is its commitment to new works by many of today's leading composers, co-commissioned with other American and international orchestras. Among the highlights this season is Adolphus Hailstork's new work, JFK: The Last Speech, presented on the 60th anniversary of that speech at Amherst College, featuring Phylicia Rashad as the narrator, soprano Katerina Burton, and conducted by Kevin John Edusei. Amherst '64 graduate Neil Bicknell wrote the libretto for the piece. See the anouncement in Broadway World:

The National Symphony Orchestra has announced its 2023–2024 season led by Music Director Gianandrea Noseda and incoming Executive Director Jean Davidson.

The Robert Frost statue near Old Main collects snow at the University of Colorado Boulder campus on Wednesday. (Cliff Gr...
02/17/2023

The Robert Frost statue near Old Main collects snow at the University of Colorado Boulder campus on Wednesday. (Cliff Grassmick/Staff photographer) Source: the Boulder Daily Camera February 16, 2023

02/03/2023

Only months after his historic visit to the Soviet Union and meeting with Premier Nikita Khrushchev, the White House announcement read:

The death of Robert Frost leaves a vacancy in the American spirit. He was the great American poet of our time. His art and his life summed up the essential qualities of the New England he loved so much: the fresh delight in nature, the plainness of speech, the canny wisdom, and the deep, underlying insight into the human soul. His death impoverishes us all, but he has bequeathed his Nation a body of imperishable verse from which Americans will forever gain joy and understanding. He had promises to keep, and miles to go, and now he sleeps.

Robert Frost died on January 29, 1963, nearly 60 years ago.  He was widely admired and honored, but he wanted more, some...
01/23/2023

Robert Frost died on January 29, 1963, nearly 60 years ago. He was widely admired and honored, but he wanted more, something different. As his friend Archibald MacLeish said on the day of the ground-breaking for the Robert Frost Library at Amherst College:..It was his eightieth birthday. Frost had been in New York where every possible honor, including some not possible, had been paid him, and, returning here to Amherst and his friends, he fell to talking of what honor really was, or would be: to leave behind him, as he put it, “a few poems it would be hard to get rid of.” It sounds like a modest wish but Frost knew, as his friends knew, that it wasn’t. Poems are not monuments – shapes of stone to stand and stand. Poems are speaking voices. And a poem that is hard to get rid of is a voice that is hard to get rid of. And a voice that is hard to get rid of is a man. What Frost wanted for himself in the midst of all that praise was what Keats had wanted for himself in the midst of no praise at all: to be among the English poets at his death – the poets of the English tongue. ..It wasn’t reputation he was thinking of that wintry evening: it was something else. To be among the English poets is to be – to go on being. Frost wanted to go on being. And he has. (from

Robert Frost died in January, 1963, only months after his historic visit to the Soviet Union and meeting with Premier Nikita Khrushchev. The White House announced:

10/22/2022

59 years ago, President Kennedy visited Amherst College. The visit and its importance is chronicled in the book JFK: The Last Speech. The book begins with an essay written by Roger Mills:

Early Saturday morning, October 26, 1963, a thick ground fog obscured the Connecticut Valley, but directly overhead the sky was clear. By about 9 a.m. the fog burned off.
At 9:20 a.m. that morning, President John F. Kennedy and his party departed the White House for Andrews Air Force base. There, they boarded Air Force One and flew to Westover Air Force base in western Massachusetts; at 11:30 a.m., they transferred to three waiting Marine helicopters. Secretary of the Interior Stewart Udall rode with the president. Minutes later, the trio of helicopters thundered over the still-green practice fields just downhill from the Amherst College gymnasium and touched down.
Kennedy had come to participate in the dedication of the Robert Frost Library at Amherst. His formal speech at the college convocation began just before midday. At few minutes after 1 p.m., he followed with brief remarks at the dedication ceremony on the library construction site where the gargoyle-studded neo-Gothic Walker Hall had recently been demolished. At 2:05 p.m., he departed.
Three weeks later, he was dead...

Purchase the book: https://www.jfkthelastspeech.org/purchase/

62 years ago today on September 12, 1960, then-Senator John F. Kennedy addressed the Greater Houston Ministerial Associa...
09/12/2022

62 years ago today on September 12, 1960, then-Senator John F. Kennedy addressed the Greater Houston Ministerial Association on the subject of his Catholicism, saying in part:

I believe in an America that is officially neither Catholic, Protestant nor Jewish--where no public official either requests or accepts instructions on public policy from the Pope, the National Council of Churches or any other ecclesiastical source--where no religious body seeks to impose its will directly or indirectly upon the general populace or the public acts of its officials--and where religious liberty is so indivisible that an act against one church is treated as an act against all…

Whatever issue may come before me as President--on birth control, divorce, censorship, gambling or any other subject--I will make my decision … in accordance with what my conscience tells me to be the national interest, and without regard to outside religious pressures or dictates.

An essay on this speech, on how significant a factor Kennedy’s religion was in his campaign and election, was written by Michael Liss, and published today in 3 Quarks Daily. Liss recaps the occasion:
“September 12, 1960. Just eight weeks before the 1960 election, and the Democratic candidate for President, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, finds himself before a crowd of roughly 300 Protestant clerics at a meeting of the Greater Houston Ministerial Association. He has been invited to explain his views on religion, more particularly, his religion.
To modern eyes, there is something surreal about this. Watch the clip in grainy black and white, read the speech, and you can’t help but be mesmerized. Why is he here? Kennedy was a war hero; he’d been a Congressman, a Senator, and a Pulitzer Prize winner. While it certainly could be argued that there might be better men for the job, surely JFK had achieved enough in his life to meet the qualifications for being a President.
Unless (and certainly many in the audience believed this) Kennedy could never be qualified. Unless, to use his own words on this day, he was just one of “40 million Americans [who] lost their chance of being president on the day they were baptized.”
… It took Kennedy 10 minutes to deliver those remarks, and there was a Q&A session that followed for roughly another 30. If he had come to convert his audience, he almost certainly didn’t. But, in terms of showing stature, maturity, balance, and more than a little courage, he’d done exactly what he needed to do. Sam Rayburn, then Speaker of the House, and a Kennedy doubter, said afterwards, ‘As they say in my part of Texas, he ate’em blood raw.’” (Copyright: Michael Liss)
There is much more to this story. Read it at: https://3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2022/09/jfk-meets-the-ministers.html
See more about President Kennedy at https://JFKTheLastSpeech.org

The Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. New pages are available that provide a detailed timeline of the Crisis as seen from both the US and USSR. See Research Pages

Announcing:  "Of Poetry and Power: the Last Speech of JFK,"a new symphony to be composed by Adolphus Hailstork.  The Sym...
03/06/2022

Announcing: "Of Poetry and Power: the Last Speech of JFK,"
a new symphony to be composed by Adolphus Hailstork.
The Symphony is inspired by President Kennedy's speech honoring Robert Frost delivered at Amherst College October 26, 1963. The work will include lines from JFK's Amherst speech interspersed with lines from poems by Robert Frost -- a libretto authored by a then Amherst senior, who heard the President speak on that idyllic fall day.
Additional information is available at: JFKTheLastSpeech.Org/Symphony

Amherst graduates are invited to join in support of this project. Co-commissioning opportunities are available. Contact: [email protected]

Inspired by President Kennedy’s speech honoring the poet Robert Frost, delivered at Amherst College October 26, 1963, the work will include lines from JFK’s Amherst speech interspersed with lines from poems by Robert Frost – a libretto authored by a then Amherst senior, who heard the President...

A Call to Public Service Echoing the Message in President Kennedy's Inaugural Address ...By Anne SchuchatNearly 15 years...
06/10/2021

A Call to Public Service Echoing the Message in President Kennedy's Inaugural Address ...
By Anne Schuchat

Nearly 15 years ago, during a ceremony in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Atlanta campus auditorium, I was promoted to rear admiral in the Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service. My father, a veteran of World War II and the Korean War, positioned my new gold epaulets on the shoulders of my service dress blue uniform while my mother, a cultural anthropologist, observed the ritual from the audience. I said to the people gathered, “Public service is a privilege. For me, it has also been a joy.” Thirty-three years later, I’m retiring from the agency, and that’s the same message I would like to send to the American public.

My father, like many in his generation, enlisted in the U.S. Navy after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Another call to national service, for another generation, followed President John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address. My route to public service was more private and less intentional than those. I initially planned to apply my medical training to clinical practice. But the C.D.C.’s disease detective program — the Epidemic Intelligence Service — got me hooked on public health.

Public service is difficult. The past year and a half left many among our ranks exhausted, threatened, saddened and sometimes sidelined. The Covid-19 pandemic is not the first time the U.S. public health system has had to surge well beyond its capacity, but with the worst pandemic in a century and, initially, a heavily partisan political context, the virus collided with a system suffering from decades of underinvestment. A recent report from the National Academy of Medicine revealed that state and local public health departments have lost an estimated 66,000 jobs since around 2008.

With prior responses — including the hantavirus outbreak and bioterrorist anthrax, pandemic H1N1 influenza and the Ebola and Zika epidemics — the public health front line has been the little engine that could. For each of those responses, state and local public health departments absorbed the initial shock until emergency funding came through — and then repeatedly watched resources ebb as the crisis abated. Over the past few decades, public health experienced a progressive weakening of our core capacities while biomedical research and development accelerated into the future. With Covid-19, we were the little engine that couldn’t.

Infections, hospitalizations and deaths are declining in the United States, thanks to extraordinary vaccination efforts. These recent improvements might make it too easy to forget just how much we have collectively been through. But I hope that it has become clear to the nation and its policymakers that when we don’t invest in public health, everyone is vulnerable.

The nation’s public health system needs major upgrades. We need to modernize our data systems, enhance our laboratory capacities for detection and genomic sequencing of infectious threats like viruses and better integrate public health’s information and response efforts with clinical, commercial and academic sectors. America needs a renewed and expanded public health work force that reflects advanced skills as well as the diversity of the communities we serve.

The C.D.C. and public health departments are now receiving critical financial resources on an emergency basis. But these investments and improvements must be sustained. Long-term commitments to resources and innovation are essential. The Covid-19 pandemic will not be the last major threat our nation will face.

Public service is deeply meaningful. In my first several years at the C.D.C., I conducted surveillance and epidemiologic studies of an infection, group B strep, that harms newborns. It is passed to infants from women during childbirth. Although research during the 1980s identified the benefit of providing antibiotics to high-risk women during labor, the practice was not put in place. I spearheaded the C.D.C.’s efforts, leading to the 1995 meeting where we brought together obstetric and pediatric organizations as well as parents who had lost babies to the infection. In 1996, the C.D.C., the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Academy of Pediatrics issued the first consensus guidelines that made prevention of group B strep a standard of care for the nation.

Because of this new practice standard and the updated guidance requiring prenatal group B strep screening of all women during pregnancy, over 100,000 of those life-threatening infections have been prevented. A generation of babies has been born since then, and public health efforts (not a new biomedical discovery) protected most of them from this condition. I was lucky early in my career to meet several parents whose personal losses reminded me why our work matters and how urgently our progress is needed.

Public service is also joyful. Ask the people who have been administering Covid-19 vaccinations what they feel as one recipient after another experiences the relief of getting an immunization that offers high-level protection and the promise of getting their lives back. The teams carrying out data analysis and field investigations and launching communication drives or laboratory studies have experienced the joy of knowing their collective efforts can achieve something none of them could do on their own.

I have experienced that kind of joy over and over — where my limited skills were complemented by team members with the full breadth of disciplines that public health requires — and where we eventually achieved so much progress. I felt this joy when, with the College of Medical and Allied Health Sciences in Sierra Leone, our team successfully carried out a clinical trial in Sierra Leone called STRIVE to introduce a vaccine to protect against Ebola during the devastating epidemic that began in 2014.

Public health successes usually take place out of the spotlight and under the radar, which for most of us in this field is just fine; victory often means preventing something bad from happening. If no one knows about it, that is often an indication of success. I was not a student athlete, though we have some superstars at the C.D.C. who were. Being part of the public health team provided the most cherished aspect of my 33 years at the C.D.C. We did not always win, but we always showed up. We celebrated one another’s efforts and remained humble in the face of threats to the public’s health, some opponents, like SARS-CoV-2, proving more devastating than others.

The Covid-19 pandemic has been as large a disrupter as a world war, and its effect on life expectancy exceeds any threat we have faced since the last “great” pandemic of 1918. Nevertheless, I hope this is also a moment when a new generation is called to action, to experience the difficulty and meaning and joy of public service. Our world needs you.

This essay is by Dr. Schuchat, principal deputy director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. She’s retiring from the agency at the end of June after 33 years. It may be found in the June 10, 2021 New York Times at:

A retirement message from Dr. Anne Schuchat to the American people.

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Amherst, MA

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