ATLANTA — Jimmy Carter 's extended public farewell began Saturday in Georgia, with the 39th U.S. president's flag-draped casket tracing his long arc from the Depression-era South and family farming business to the pinnacle of American political power and decades as a global humanitarian.
Those chapters shone throughout the opening stanza of a six-day state funeral intended to blend personalized memorials with the ceremonial pomp afforded to former presidents. The longest-lived U.S. executive, Carter died on Dec. 29 at the age of 100.
''He was an amazing man. He was held up and propped up and soothed by an amazing woman,'' son James Earl ''Chip'' Carter III, told mourners at The Carter Center late Saturday afternoon, referring also to his mother, former first lady Rosalynn Carter, who died in 2023. ''The two of them together changed the world. And it was an amazing thing to watch so close.''
Grandson Jason Carter, who now chairs the center's governing board, said, ''It's amazing what you can cram into a hundred years.''
Carter's children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren accompanied their patriarch as his hearse rode first Saturday through his hometown of Plains, which at about 700 residents is not much bigger than when Carter was born there Oct. 1, 1924. The procession stopped at the farm where the future president toiled alongside the Black sharecroppers who worked for his father. The motorcade continued to Atlanta, stopping in front of the Georgia Capitol where Carter served as a state senator and reformist governor.
Finally, he arrived for his last visit to the Carter Presidential Center, which houses his presidential library and The Carter Center where he based his post-White House advocacy for public health, democracy and human rights, setting a new standard for what former presidents can accomplish after they yield power.
''His spirit fills this place,'' Jason Carter told the assembly that included some of the center's 3,000 employees worldwide. ''You continue the vibrant living legacy of what is my grandfather's life work,'' he added.
Pallbearers on Saturday came from the Secret Service that protected the Carters for almost a half-century and a military honor guard that included Navy servicemembers for the only U.S. Naval Academy graduate to reach the Oval Office. A military band played ''Hail to the Chief'' and the hymn ''Be Thou My Vision'' for the commander in chief who also was a devout Baptist.