JFK trivia: His presidential library houses papers of which famous author?
The presidential library began with FDR, and one for George W. Bush broke ground last week. JFK's includes a collection from an American novelist.
John, Robert, and Edward Kennedy are pictured in Hyannisport, Mass. in this photograph taken in July 1960.
John F. Kennedy Presidential Library/Reuters
Washington
EX-President of the United States – it’s a pretty good job to have. You get a lifetime pension (equal to what a cabinet officer gets paid). The US pays for your staff (though none of them can earn more than $96,000 a year). You get $1 million a year for travel and security expenses.
Skip to next paragraphRecent posts
-
12.24.11
A Christmas tree farmer as president? How he raised spirits during wartime. -
12.15.11
Could Iran copy the 'beast'? US aircraft have been reverse-engineered before -
11.23.11
Thanksgiving Day proclamation: Its curious link to 'Mary Had a Little Lamb' -
11.22.11
Michelle Obama booed. Has that happened to first ladies before? -
11.04.11
To define poverty, US has a new (and improved?) formula.
Subscribe Today to the Monitor
Plus, you get a presidential library, a whole academic institution dedicated to the study of you and your times.
George W. Bush broke ground for his on the campus of Southern Methodist University just the other day.
But there’s a catch when it comes to that library thing. Uncle Sam doesn’t pay to build them. Former Oval Office occupants must raise the money for construction themselves. They also have to set up an endowment equal to about 20 percent of the library’s value. Only then will the National Archives accept the facility on behalf of a grateful nation.
That takes a lot of checks.
“I appreciate the 160,000 donors whose generosity has ensured that this building was fully paid for before we broke ground,” said Mr. Bush at his recent Dallas library ceremony.
The whole US presidential library system is relatively new, historically speaking. There are only 13, despite the fact that there have been 44 presidents.
Franklin Roosevelt started the trend by donating his papers to the federal government, as well as enough money to help pay for running an archive center at his old estate in Hyde Park, N.Y.
Then Harry Truman decided he’d do the same thing. In 1955, Congress passed a Presidential Library Act that established the basic pattern: Private money pays to build them, then the US government takes them over and runs them. (A 1986 update of the act added the endowment requirement.)
Fun fact: The John F. Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston contains the world’s largest collection of Ernest Hemingway material, as well as JFK’s stuff. The two men never met but they admired each other, so in 1968 Hemingway’s widow donated his papers to the library.



These comments are not screened before publication. Constructive debate about the above story is welcome, but personal attacks are not. Please do not post comments that are commercial in nature or that violate any copyright[s]. Comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence will be removed. If you find a comment offensive, you may flag it.