Nevada
President Jimmy Carter has died at 100. Here are 5 ties he had to Nevada
President Jimmy Carter’s son lost to John Ensign in a run for U.S. Senate in 2002.
39th U.S. president, Jimmy Carter, has died
Peanut farmer, devout Christian and the 39th president of the United States: This is the legacy of President Jimmy Carter.
Former President Jimmy Carter, who is longest-lived American president, has died. He was 100.
Carter was a Georgia governor when he won the 1976 presidency, defeating then-President Gerald R. Ford.
Here are some ties to the Silver State for the 39th president.
GOP governor hung onto Carter keepsake for decades
When he was 12 years old, Brian Sandoval was with his family in Washington, D.C., and bought a peanut-shaped piggy bank which honored then-President Jimmy Carter, who was a peanut farmer. Forty years later, in 2017 then-Nevada Gov. Sandoval brought it to Reno-Tahoe Airport, and former President Carter signed it for him.
His son ran for office in Nevada
In 2006, Jack Carter was the Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate in Nevada. The oldest child of Jimmy Carter moved to the state in 2002, and won the Democratic nomination with 78% of the vote. He lost the general election to incumbent Republican John Ensign, 55% to 41%.
Carter visited UNR to watch things shake
In 2017, Carter visited the University of Nevada Earthquake Engineering Laboratory.
UNR wrote that while the lab “has had some exciting experiments and distinguished visitors over the years, the most exciting was a visit and tour this year with former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and former First Lady Rosalynn Carter.”
“We were proud to host President Carter and his group, the Carter Center; It was a highlight for all of us,” Ahmad Itani, chair of the Civil and Environmental Engineering Department said. “To be able to show off our facility and the world-improving research we conduct was the highest honor.”
UNR’s boxing coach could have gone to the Olympics if it wasn’t for Carter
Pat Jefferson, a University of Nevada boxing coach, was a 1979 World Amateur Champion in boxing. He would have gone to the 1980 Olympics in Moscow, but Carter and the United States boycotted the games that year due to the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan the previous year.
In 1980, he was captain of a U.S. AAU team that went to Russia, where he defeated the Russian national champion.
Jefferson turned pro in 1980 after the American boycott of the Moscow Olympics.
A longtime Reno resident was his commanding officer in the Navy
John B. Williams, a Reno High graduate, University of Nevada undergraduate student and Wolf Pack basketball player, was Carter’s commanding officer on the submarine U.S. Pomfret from 1948 to 1950. Williams served as lieutenant commander while Carter, a fellow alumnus of the Naval Academy, was an ensign who rose to the rank of lieutenant while serving under Williams.
After retiring from the Navy, Williams returned to Reno and ended up reuniting with Carter during the future president’s 1976 campaign stop here. Williams was a guest of Carter at Carter’s 1977 inauguration.