
John Fitzgerald Kennedy was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, on May 29, 1917, later serving his nation in the Navy during the height of the Second World War. When he delivered his timeless inaugural address in 1961, he reminded humanity that Earth’s progress rests entirely in our own hands. A poignant layer to his legacy is that his iconic call for civic action was balanced by a last-minute emphasis on global peace—a deliberate rewrite by a young president desperately trying to ease Cold War tensions and avert nuclear conflict before his life was tragically cut short.

