Jimmy Carter, the 39th president of the United States, died Sunday at the age of 100.
Carter had been in home hospice care since February 2023. He became the oldest living US president in history after George H.W. Bush died in 2018 at the age of 94.
Carter, a peanut farmer from Plains, Georgia, who served in the US Navy, was president from 1977 to 1981.
Championing human rights at the center of US foreign policy, Carter forged a still-standing peace treaty between Egypt and Israel. He also established the Department of Energy in 1977.
Shortly after, Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, established the Carter Center, which has monitored international elections and promoted public health across the world.

Carter is held by his mother, Lillian, when he was just a month old. Carter was born October 1, 1924, in Plains, Georgia. He was the first US president to be born in a hospital.
Jimmy Carter Library

Carter, 6, poses with his sister Gloria in 1931.
AP Photo

Carter graduated from the US Naval Academy in June 1946 after completing the accelerated wartime program.
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Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, are seen on their wedding day in July 1946.
Jimmy Carter Library

The Carters share a light moment at his campaign headquarters in Atlanta in 1966. Jimmy, a Georgia state senator at the time, ran for governor but lost in the Democratic primary.
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Carter is applauded at his Atlanta headquarters in 1970. He was running for governor again — and this time he won.
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Carter shovels peanuts in the '70s. Carter was the son of a peanut farmer, and he took over the family business in 1953 before his political career took off.
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Carter gets a haircut during his first year as governor of Georgia. He was inaugurated in 1971.
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Carter holds his 7-year-old daughter, Amy, in 1974, just after he officially announced that he would be running for president.
AP

After becoming the Democratic Party's presidential nominee in 1976, Carter raises hands with running mate Walter Mondale at the Democratic National Convention in New York. Standing to Carter's right is his wife, Rosalynn, and their daughter, Amy. Carter ran as a Washington outsider and someone who promised to shake up government.
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Carter and President Gerald Ford debate domestic policy at the Walnut Street Theater in Philadelphia in September 1976. It was the first of three Ford-Carter presidential debates.
White House Photo/National Archive

Carter embraces his wife after receiving news of his election victory in November 1976. Carter received 297 electoral votes, while Ford received 241.
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Chief Justice Warren Burger swears Carter into office in January 1977 while Rosalynn Carter looks on.
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Carter, second from left, and his brother Billy, left, visit Georgia's St. Simons Island in 1977.
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Carter is applauded by members of Congress after he signed a bill creating the Department of Energy in August 1977.
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Carter meets with civic leaders from Georgia and Florida to explain his new Panama Canal treaty in August 1977.
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Carter delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress in January 1978. "Government cannot solve our problems," he said. Anti-government sentiment at the time was brought on by economic pessimism along with the end of the Vietnam War and the unraveling of the Watergate saga.
AP Photo

Carter and members of his Cabinet meet in the White House in March 1978.
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Carter and West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt are all smiles as they prepare to depart Berlin in July 1978. Carter and Schmidt came to Berlin to see the Berlin Wall and the Airlift Memorial and hold a town meeting with citizens of Berlin.
AP

Three days before his birthday in 1978, Carter blows out candles on a birthday cake presented to him at a fundraiser for the Democratic National Committee.
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Carter jogs on the South Lawn of the White House in December 1978.
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From left, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, Carter and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin join hands after the signing of peace accord ended 31 years of war between Egypt and Israel in March 1979. It was one of the highlights of Carter's presidency.
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Carter visits the crippled Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Pennsylvania in April 1979.
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Carter pauses to kiss his wife, Rosalynn, before boarding a helicopter at the White House in May 1979.
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Carter walks with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev outside the US embassy in Vienna, Austria, in June 1979. They held private talks before heading to the Imperial Hofburg Palace to sign the SALT II nuclear treaty.
AP

College student Chuck McManis watches Carter's nationally televised energy speech from a service station in Los Angeles in July 1979. In this speech, Carter described what he saw as a growing "crisis of confidence" in the country. An Arab oil embargo led to fuel shortages and sky-high prices throughout much of the 1970s. At times, Americans were waiting in line for hours to fill their gas tanks.
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Carter sits with President-elect Ronald Reagan en route to Reagan's inauguration in January 1981. Reagan had defeated Carter in a landslide.
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Before departing for Georgia following Reagan's inauguration, Carter holds his crying daughter as his wife blows a kiss at Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland.
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Carter gets a hug from his mother, Lillian, as he arrives home in Plains, Georgia, after Reagan's inauguration.
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Carter traveled to Wiesbaden, West Germany, in January 1981 to greet the 52 American hostages who had been released by Iran after 444 days of captivity.
AP

The Carters wear glittering garlands and a turban given to them by Pakistani tribesmen at the Pakistan-Afghanistan border in 1986. They also received a pair of rams.
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Carter addresses a United Nations interfaith service at New York's Trinity Church in 1991. His speech was entitled "The Present Role of the United Nations in a Changing World."
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From left, former President George H.W. Bush, President Bill Clinton, Carter and Vice President Al Gore attend the Presidents' Summit for America's Future in Philadelphia in 1997. They helped clean up local neighborhoods as part of the effort to encourage volunteer service.
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Clinton presented Carter with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, in 1999. Carter was recognized for his diplomatic achievements and humanitarian efforts.
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Carter works at a construction site sponsored by the Jimmy Carter Work Project in Asan, South Korea, in 2001. The Carters have been involved with the nonprofit Habitat for Humanity since 1984.
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Cuban President Fidel Castro calls for time as Carter prepares to throw the first pitch at a baseball game in Havana, Cuba, in May 2002. It was the first time a US president, past or present, had visited Cuba since the 1959 Cuban Revolution.
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Students at the University of Havana listen to Carter outline his vision for improved relations between the United States and Cuba in May 2002. The speech was broadcast live and uncensored on Cuban state television.
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Carter is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, Norway, in December 2002. He was recognized for his many years of public service, and in his acceptance speech he urged others to work for peace.
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Carter adjusts his headphones at a news conference in Caracas, Venezuela, in 2003. He proposed a referendum on Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez's presidency or an amendment to the constitution as a way to end the political crisis in the South American nation.
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Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean speaks beside Carter during a campaign stop in Plains, Georgia, in January 2004.
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Rosalynn Carter smashes a bottle of champagne against the sail of the USS Jimmy Carter during the submarine's christening ceremony in Connecticut in June 2004.
Department of Defense/National Archive

The Carters wave to the audience at the Democratic National Convention in Boston in July 2004.
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Carter checks his notes while observing a polling station in Maputo, Mozambique, in December 2004. Since 1989, the Carter Center has been observing elections around the world to determine their legitimacy. The nonprofit organization was founded by Carter and his wife to advance human rights across the globe.
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Carter is interviewed at a Washington, DC, hotel room in 2006.
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In 2007, Carter speaks to children in Ghana on the seriousness of eradicating guinea worm disease.
Courtesy Carter Center

The Carters arrive for President Barack Obama's inauguration in January 2009.
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Carter meets with Obama and other former presidents at the White House in January 2009. From left are George H.W. Bush, Obama, George W. Bush, Clinton and Carter.
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Carter testifies in May 2009 during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on energy independence and security.
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Hamas leader Ismail Haniya speaks in June 2009 during a joint news conference with Carter in Gaza. Carter denounced the deprivations facing Palestinians in Gaza as unique in history, asserting that they are being treated "like animals."
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Carter delivers a speech in Seoul, South Korea, after receiving an honorary doctorate degree from Korea University in March 2010. During a four-day visit to South Korea, Carter urged direct talks with North Korea, saying a failure to negotiate nuclear disarmament might lead to a "catastrophic" war.
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Carter greets South African leader Nelson Mandela in Johannesburg in May 2010.
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Carter hugs Aijalon Mahli Gomes at Boston's Logan International Airport in August 2010. Carter negotiated Gomes' release after he was held in North Korea for crossing into the country illegally in January 2010.
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Carter visits a weekly anti-settlement protest in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah in October 2010. Former Irish President Mary Robinson is on the right.
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Carter and other former presidents, including Clinton and both George Bushes, attend the Points of Light Institute Tribute to Former President George H.W. Bush in March 2011.
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Cuban President Raul Castro greets Carter and his wife at the Revolution Palace in Havana in March 2011.
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In April 2011, Carter addresses students at the Pyongyang University of Foreign Studies in Pyongyang, North Korea.
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Carter was interviewed for "The Presidents' Gatekeepers" project at the Carter Center in Atlanta in September 2011.
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Carter fly fishes in Kilkenny, Ireland, in May 2013.
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From left, President Obama, Carter, first lady Michelle Obama and Clinton wave from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in August 2013. It was the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, which is best remembered for Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech.
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Carter talks with reporters in Chicago at a signing for his book "A Call to Action: Women, Religion, Violence and Power" in 2014. In the book, Carter argues that the abuse and subjugation of women and girls is one of the biggest challenges the world faces.
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Carter talks about his cancer diagnosis during a news conference at the Carter Center in Atlanta in August 2015. Carter announced that his cancer was on four small spots on his brain and that he would immediately begin radiation treatment. In December 2015, Carter announced that he was cancer-free.
Kevin D. Liles/The New York Times/Redux

Carter and his wife arrive for the inauguration of Donald Trump in January 2017.
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Carter, center, speaks alongside other former US presidents as they attend a hurricane relief concert in College Station, Texas, in October 2017.
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Carter holds up a copy of his new book "Faith: A Journey For All" at a book-signing event in New York in March 2018.
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Carter greets visitors before teaching a Sunday school class at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, Georgia, in April 2018.
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Carter walks with his wife, Rosalynn, and Secret Service members after having dinner at a friend's home in Plains, Georgia, in August 2018.
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The Carters speak with Atlanta Falcons head coach Dan Quinn prior to an NFL game in September 2018.
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Former President George W. Bush greets Carter and other former presidents during the state funeral for his father in December 2018.
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Carter fell and hit his head in 2019 while getting ready for church, requiring 14 stitches above his brow. But he didn't let that stop him from heading to Nashville, Tennessee, that afternoon for a week of building houses with Habitat for Humanity.
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President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden met with the Carters at the Carters' home in April 2021. The photo grabbed people's attention on social media because of what appeared to be a significant size difference between the two couples. While many experts theorized that it was the result of a wide-angle lens, Adam Schultz, the chief official White House photographer, declined to explain when reached by The New York Times.
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The Carters celebrate their 75th wedding anniversary in Plains in July 2021. "The best thing I ever did was marrying Rosalynn," Carter once said.
John Bazemore/Pool/Reuters

The Carters appear at the Peanut Festival Parade in Plains in September 2023. It was the first time the former president had been seen in public since he began receiving hospice care at home in February of that year.
Photo by Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Carter attends his wife's tribute service in November 2023.
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