- Hamilton Jordan
Infobox Officeholder
name = Hamilton Jordan
imagesize = 200px
small
caption = Chief of Staff Jordan
order = 8thWhite House Chief of Staff
term_start = 1979
term_end = 1980
deputy =
president =Jimmy Carter
primeminister =
predecessor = "Vacant" (Carter Admin)Dick Cheney (Ford Admin)
successor = Jack Watson
birth_date =September 21 1944
birth_place =Albany, Georgia .
death_date = death date and age|2008|5|20|1944|9|21
death_place =Atlanta, Georgia
party = Democratic
spouse = Dorothy Jordan
children = Hamilton Jr., Kathleen and Alexander William Hamilton McWhorter Jordan (September 21 1944 –May 20 2008 [ [http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/stories/2008/05/20/hamilton_jordan_obituary_carter.html Atlanta Journal Constitution: Hamilton Jordan, Carter's chief of staff, dies] ] [ [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/20/AR2008052002286_2.html?sid=ST2008052002312 The Washington Post: Architect Of Carter Presidency] ] ) was Chief of Staff toPresident of the United States Jimmy Carter .Early life
Jordan (who pronounced his last name to rhyme with "burden" instead of "borden") was born in
Charlotte, North Carolina . He grew up inAlbany, Georgia . He attended theUniversity of Georgia inAthens, Georgia and graduated with anA.B. in Political Science in 1967. After being disqualified from military service due to leg problems, he worked as a civilian volunteer in Vietnam during the war there, assisting refugees.Political career
Jordan was a key advisor and strategist for Jimmy Carter during the 1976 presidential campaign and during Carter's administration, serving as
White House Chief of Staff in 1979-1980 (Carter, who took office in 1977, had previously not seen the need formally to appoint an aide to such a post). Jordan played a powerful role in the formulation of election strategies and government policies.Jordan is appreciated today for his shrewd political mind. But in 1976 his youth and casual style gave him a media reputation as a fun-loving, unsophisticated "good ole boy." This turned into a problem during the later days of the Carter administration, when Jordan became a lightning rod for critics of the president across the political spectrum. The media repeated rumors of coarse and even criminal behavior by Jordan, but extensive legal investigations failed to substantiate any of them. Jordan later recalled this as a particularly painful time in his life. In 1986, he ran for the Democratic nomination for one of Georgia's seats in the
United States Senate . He lost the primary to RepresentativeWyche Fowler , who went on to win the general election. In 1992, he became a high-level staffer on the presidential campaign of independent candidateH. Ross Perot . In later years he served both as a member of the founders council and as an important public advocate forUnity08 , a political movement focused on reforming the American two party system.Later life
Jordan was chief executive of the
Association of Tennis Professionals when they took control of the professional men's world tennis tour in 1990. His nephew, R. Lawton Jordan, served as Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy Director of the White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs during Bill Clinton's administration.Personal
He and his wife, a pediatric
oncology nurse, founded a camp for children with cancer - Camp Sunshine Retreat - in Georgia. He was an honorary board member of theMultiple Myeloma Research Foundation .Death
Jordan died on
May 20 2008 , aged 63, frommesothelioma . He had survived several other forms ofcancer earlier in his life includingmelanoma andprostate cancer .External links
* [http://www.nndb.com/people/613/000024541 Profile of Hamilton Jordan]
* [http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/carter/peopleevents/p_georgia.html American Experience, "The Georgia Mafia", PBS, 2002]
* [http://www.uga.edu/news/artman/publish/050309jordan.shtml "Hamilton Jordan coming to UGA to write book on Carter presidency", UGA Office of Public Affairs News Release, Mar 9, 2005]References
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