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Days of tribute for the 39th president began on Saturday with stops at his childhood farm, the Georgia State Capitol and the Carter Center.
![A long black hearse rolls down a street lined with people under clear skies.](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2025/01/04/multimedia/04nat-carter-georgia-tgck/04nat-carter-georgia-tgck-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale)
By Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon and Rick Rojas
Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon reported from Americus, Ga.
Jan. 4, 2025Updated 11:24 a.m. ET
In a few days, Jimmy Carter will be celebrated in a towering cathedral in Washington by fellow American presidents, noted humanitarians and other world leaders.
But before all of that, a hearse carrying the remains of Mr. Carter, the nation’s 39th president, paused on Saturday outside a farmhouse in Georgia. There, he raised chickens, helped his father tend to peanut crops and began a seemingly improbable, century-long journey that vaulted him from Plains, Ga., to the heights of political influence and along a globe-trotting mission to eradicate disease and protect democracy.
It was the first stop in a valedictory trek tracing the scope of a lengthy and varied life. The trek, like his life, began and will end in a patch of rural Georgia, where he was born and raised and where he died on Dec. 29 at 100.
In the days ahead, the series of memorial events will incorporate a discussion of the impression that Mr. Carter made on the world, including the legacy he left after a single term in the White House and a post-presidential life that also came to define him.
On Saturday, the journey began with a recognition of the places and people who had been instrumental in shaping him.
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