A member of the new generation of the Kennedy and Fitzgerald political dynasties, John Fitzgerald Kennedy ran for the House of Representatives from Massachusetts.

Kennedy entered politics just after the war, during which he served as a commanding officer of a patrol torpedo (PT) boat. He was awarded several medals for bravery. The Massachusetts 11th congressional district, with its working-class majority, proved to be an extremely difficult one to sway for a man from a family of multimillionaires. His competitors tried to play on this card, however, the respect he earned in the war and Kennedy's proposed programme to protect veterans disarmed his political opponents.

In 1947, John F. Kennedy won a seat in Congress and kept it until 1953. He later became a senator representing Massachusetts for seven years and beat Richard Nixon in the presidential election at the age of 43.

The three years of his presidency saw the Berlin Crisis of 1961, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the Space Race competition between the Soviet Union and the United States, and major steps towards overcoming racial discrimination. The president was assassinated in Dallas in November 1963.

In the United States, an international airport in New York and many streets, schools, and other sites are named after Kennedy. According to a nationwide poll, John F. Kennedy is one of the ten greatest presidents in the history of the United States.

Source:

Biography of John F. Kennedy, RIA Novosti, 23.11.2013