One day before the New Hampshire primaries, Carter, along with all but one of the other Democratic presidential candidates vying for their party’s presidential nomination including Mo Udall, Birch Bayh, and Fred Harris, appeared at John Hancock Hall for the first in a series of five “Presidential Forums” organized by the League of Women Voters. The Forum centered on “High employment, low inflation and cheap energy,” and was televised on WGBH-TV, according to a 1976 Globe article.
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On the campaign trail before he was elected president, Carter made a brief appearance ata fundraiser for local candidates including then-Congressional candidate Edward J. Markey at the Ramada Inn in East Boston, according to public schedule records. Carter then travelled to Chestnut Hill to speak 5,000 students at Boston College’s Roberts Center with Senator Edward M. Kennedy.
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He returned to the Ramada Inn, where he met with hundreds ofJewish leaders at the Conference of Presidents of the Major Jewish Organizations, according to a 1976 Globe article.
President Jimmy Carter spoke during a town meeting in Clinton on March 16, 1977.David L. Ryan/Globe Staff/The Boston Globe
March 16-17, 1977: Clinton
Carter’s first visit to Massachusetts as president came just two months after he was inaugurated at a period of high unemployment and inflation around the country.
After arriving at a hotel in Boxoboro, Carter dined with Democratic Massachusetts officials including Governor Michael Dukakis, Senator Ed Kennedy, and several other elected representatives.
As a part of his “people-to-people” campaign to connect with Americans, Carter visited the small town of Clinton to host a town hall meeting and answer questions from the public.
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He then spent the night at the home of Clinton residents Edward and Kay Thompson, along with their eight children. Clinton residents lined the block on Chestnut Street where the Thompsons lived to catch a glimpse of the president.
“We’re an average family and we’ll do no more for the president than we would for any other guest,” Kay Thompson told the Globe at the time.
After having breakfast with the Thompsons March 17 — and writing a note to excuse 14-year-old Jane Thompson’s tardiness to school — Carter took the presidential motorcade to Hanscom Air Force Base in Bedford, departing Massachusetts on Air Force One, according to records of his public schedule.
Oct. 28, 1978: Lynn and Lynnfield
President Jimmy Carter held Ashley Tsongas, daughter of Senate candidate Paul Tsongas, during a visit to Lynn on Oct. 28, 1978.David L. Ryan/Globe Staff/The Boston Globe
Just over a week before the 1978 midterm elections, Carter briefly visited the northeast amidst a packed campaign schedule to stump for Massachusetts Democratic candidates.
On the steps of the Lynn City Hall, Carter spoke to a crowd of about 25,000, praising Senate candidate Paul Tsongas and gubernatorial candidate Edward King.High school bands from several North Shore communities, including Lynn and Salem, performed.
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“It is an honor for me to come back to Massachusetts,” Carter said to the crowd, according to a 1978 Globe article. “You treated me well in 1976.”
His motorcade, often pausing so the president could wave to onlookers lining the route, then proceeded to neighboring Lynnfield, about eight miles northwest, where he addressed guests at a fundraising reception for then-Representative Tsongas and King at the Colonial Inn before jetting off on Air Force One to Portland, Maine. Both Tsongas and King won their races that year.
The entirety of the Massachusetts trip spanned about three hours, according to his public schedule from that day.
President Jimmy Carter and First Lady Rosalynn Carter disembarked from a plane at Logan Airport in Boston on Oct. 20, 1979.David Rodgers/Globe Staff/The Boston Globe
Carter flew into Boston via Logan Airport on an unusually warm October morning to deliver dedication remarks at the opening of theJohn F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Dorchester. In his speech, Carter grieved Kennedy’s death and spoke of carrying forward the former president’s vision for America.
“This library will be more than just a collection of photographs and objects under glass,” Carter said in his dedication remarks to a crowd of about 7,000 guests at the ceremony. “It will be a living memorial at many levels. Here in Boston, it will take up the causes of the community, helping to revitalize this section of our city. Across the country, it will reach out to visitors and scholars, summoning young men and women to careers in public life.”
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After the dedication ceremony, Senator Ted Kennedy escorted Carter and his wife, Rosalynn Carter, on a tour of the library.
After returning to Logan, Carter taped interviews with multiple Boston media outlets including the Christian Science Monitor, WBZ-TV, WCVB-TV, WBGBH-TV, and WNAC-TV, before returning to Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland.
The president’s trip to Boston lasted about four and a half hours, according to Carter’s daily schedule.
President Jimmy Carter spoke at the podium during a campaign stop in Boston’s North End on Oct. 15, 1980.David L. Ryan/Globe Staff/The Boston Globe
Air Force One landed at Logan Airport around 10:30 a.m. for a whirlwind day of presidential campaigning just weeks before the 1980 general election, in which Carter would lose the presidency to Ronald Reagan.
His first stop was the Christopher Columbus Community Center in the North End, where he met with about 300 senior citizens from Boston.
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The rest of the afternoon comprised campaign rallies and fundraisers. Outside the community center, the president spoke at a campaign rally, then travelled to Anthony’s Pier 4 restaurant in South Boston for a $500-a-plate Massachusetts Democratic National Committee Fundraising Luncheon before returning to Logan Airport and departing Beantown for the last time as president.
Sonel Cutler can be reached at sonel.cutler@globe.com. Follow her @cutler_sonel. Kathy McCabe can be reached at Katherine.McCabe@globe.com. Follow her @GlobeKMcCabe.
BOSTON (WHDH) – State public health officials have announced two confirmed cases of measles in Massachusetts this year.
The first case came from a school-aged resident who was exposed and diagnoses while out of state. This person has remained out of state during the infectious period.
The second case was diagnosed by an adult in Greater Boston. Officials say this person had recently returned from international travel with an uncertain vaccination history.
This person visited several locations. Both local and state health officials are working with the locations to identify and notify those who were potentially exposed.
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“Our first two measles cases in 2026 demonstrate the impact that the measles outbreaks, nationally and internationally, can have here at home. Fortunately, thanks to high vaccination rates, the risk to most Massachusetts residents remains low,” said Public Health Commissioner Robbie Goldstein, MD, PhD. “Measles is the most contagious respiratory virus and can cause life-threatening illness. These cases are a reminder of the need for health care providers and local health departments to remain vigilant for cases so that appropriate public health measures can be rapidly employed to prevent spread in the state. This is also a reminder that getting vaccinated is the best way for people to protect themselves from this disease.”
(Copyright (c) 2025 Sunbeam Television. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)
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Several Cape Cod and South Coast communities in Massachusetts are still digging out three days after a historic blizzard buried neighborhoods in several feet of snow, complicating emergency response efforts and prompting additional state support.
Cities and towns including Brockton, Taunton, New Bedford and Fall River received outside assistance Thursday as crews continued to plow streets and clear critical infrastructure. While road conditions have improved in many areas, officials said buried fire hydrants remain a serious concern.
NBC10 Boston obtained Taunton police body camera footage that captured first responders scrambling to locate a hydrant during a house fire on Plain Street.
“Looking for a hydrant now,” one first responder can be heard saying. “They’re all buried.”
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At one point, an officer asked a bystanders for help.
A home was burned to the ground after an explosion that left two people injured.
Officials said the home exploded after a gas leak Wednesday, leaving a family of three displaced.
The mother and daughter were treated for serious burns.
William Shivers, who helped firefighters dig out a hydrant, described the urgency.
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“We took the shovels, and we were just banging into the snow, looking for a fire hydrant,” he said.
After locating a hydrant using a map on his phone, Shivers and firefighters were able to clear it, but he said the delay could have been worse.
Two people are in the hospital and neighbors are worried about safety after an explosion and fire reduced a house to rubble.
“Imagine how many more how many more minutes that would have been wasted, you know, shoveling, just going through the snow,” said Shivers.
The case underscores the broader challenges facing first responders across the region following Monday’s storm.
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Firefighters in Watertown also experienced delays accessing hydrants during a fire on Tuesday.
Snow and ice presented challenges as firefighters battled flames Tuesday.
Gov. Maura Healey toured parts of the South Coast on Thursday and said the region was hit especially hard.
“This whole region, I think, was ground zero,” she said.
Healey said the state will continue deploying resources to affected communities.
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“We won’t take our foot off the gas at all,” she said.
The governor activated the Massachusetts National Guard. Troops assisted with snow removal in Plymouth, conducted wellness checks in Duxbury and provided medical and logistical support in Fall River.
Matt Medeiros of Fall River was praised by the governor and other officials for developing an app that allows residents to report unplowed streets.
“It’s just hoping to get those resources in and everyone just staying out of the way of trucks and equipment,” he said.
Meanwhile, Mansfield implemented a parking ban at 8 p.m. Thursday to allow plows to clear roads more efficiently.
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Matthew Lawlor of WalkUp Roslindale, a nonprofit advocating for clean and safe streets, emphasized that residents also play a role in public safety.
“The fire hydrant piece of it’s essential,” he noted.
Lawlor urged neighbors to clear hydrants near their homes before an emergency strikes, while also calling on elected officials to provide some incentives.
“To the extent that people can be encouraged to dig those hydrants out as soon as they can, so that it’s not waiting until something happens,” he said.
State officials said the blizzard slowed plowing operations, contributing to the lag in sending additional help to some communities. The Massachusetts Department of Transportation said it hopes to deploy its 200 pieces of equipment to impacted areas within the next 24 to 48 hours.
Massachusetts residents will be able to take Google’s online training courses about artificial intelligence and other tech topics for free under a deal thatthe state announced on Thursday.
The courses, which cover topics ranging from how to use cutting-edge AI tools for work to applications in cybersecurity and e-commerce, normally cost $49 per month. Residents who complete the courses can earn professional certifications from the tech giant.
Governor Maura Healey, who unveiled the free offering at an event at Google’s office in Kendall Square, is going all-in on AI as she mounts her reelection campaign. At a time when polls show deep mistrust of AI and some Democrats such as Senator Bernie Sanders are calling for restricting AI, Healey has embraced the technology.
“We’re working to put the benefits of this technology to use for everybody,” Healey said. “We want our innovators and companies and talent to know that this is the place to be if you want to be on board with using AI to more quickly cure diseases and find treatments and solve problems.”
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Healey previously set aside $100 million to spur AI business development in Massachusetts and earlier this month announced the state would contract with OpenAI to provide a version of ChatGPT for 40,000 state workers.
The government efforts got a big assist in January, when a group of local tech companies led by Whoop formed a private-sector coalition to promote AI startups. AI usage has exploded across many industries and stock market investors have driven up the price of some AI-related companies while selling off stocks of software companies that could be displaced by AI apps.
Google launched its online tech training courses almost 10 years ago and said it has issued professional certifications to more than one million people. Almost three-quarters of people who were certified said the courses helped them at work by leading to a promotion, new job, or raise, within six months, Google said.
The company’s new AI certification online course, announced earlier this month, covers topics such as learning how to write a prompt for an AI chatbot and how to use the apps to write software, a growing practice known as “vibe coding,” as it does not require deep knowledge of programming.
Lisa Gevelber, founder of the tech giant’s Grow with Google online training program, said the company has worked previously with other states such as Pennsylvania and Oklahoma to offer free tech training courses, but Massachusetts will be the first to offer the new AI course to residents for free.
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The online training programs for residents will be available through the Massachusetts AI Hub, an initiative funded by Healey’s earlier $100 million AI effort.
Despite Healey’s recentefforts and the state’s long history as a leader in the tech industry, most of the development of AI and the birth of leading AI companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic, and Perplexity has happened elsewhere. While local universities are producing plenty of AI research, only a handful of major startups, such as music generator Suno and model developer Liquid AI, are based in Massachusetts.
In her remarks on Thursday, Healey addressed some of the underlying concerns about the technology. “People are nervous about AI and the uses of AI and the potentially negative uses of AI, and what could happen,” she said. “The more of us that know AI, that understand AI, that work with AI, the safer I believe we’re going to be, and the more appropriate guardrails will be put in place, because more people will understand. And that’s why we’re promoting AI literacy and learning in our schools, and it’s why we’re making this available through Google.”
Aaron Pressman can be reached at aaron.pressman@globe.com. Follow him @ampressman.