Roger G. Kennedy

Roger George Kennedy (August 3, 1926 – September 30, 2011) was an American polymath whose career included banking, television production, historical writing, and museum administration, the last as director of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History, before the Bill Clinton administration selected him to head the National Park Service in 1993. He was especially concerned about expanding the service's educational role and moved to enlarge its presence beyond the parks via the Internet.

Roger G. Kennedy
Kennedy's official portrait as head of the National Park Service
BornAugust 3, 1926
St. Paul, Minnesota, U.S.[1]
DiedSeptember 30, 2011(2011-09-30) (aged 85)
EducationUniversity of Minnesota Law School
OccupationBanking, television production, historical writing, museum administration
Spouse(s)Frances Kennedy

Life and career

Kennedy graduated from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1952. He unsuccessfully ran for Congress in 1952 as a Republican, later beocming a Democrat. In 1953, he moved to Washington, D.C. where he worked as a civil trial lawyer with the Department of Justice and served as special assistant to the U.S. Attorney General and to the secretaries of the Department of Labor and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. He rose to national notice in 1955 as a news correspondent covering the Supreme Court and the White House for NBC, for which he also wrote and produced television documentaries and hosted a radio program.[2]

Returning to Minnesota in the 1960s, Kennedy worked as a bank chairman in St. Paul and then as vice president for investments for the University of Minnesota, along with being a founder of the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. In 1969 the Ford Foundation brought him on as vice president for finance.[2]

The Clinton administration appointed him as Director of the National Park Service in 1993. During his tenure, the NPS restructured its field operations and sharply reduced its central office staffs as part of a government-wide effort to downsize the federal bureaucracy. Kennedy resigned at the end of President Clinton's first term in 1997.[3]

He was married to Frances Kennedy.[2]

He died from melanoma on September 30, 2011, at the age of 85.[4][5]

Suggested Reading

"The Human Element" 2001 The George Wright Society. All rights reserved. First published in THE GEORGE WRIGHT FORUM, Volume 18, No. 2.

Burr, Hamilton, and Jefferson: A Study in Character 2000 Oxford University Press.[6]

gollark: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4a/3.4V_Zener_diode_V-A_characteristic.svg/800px-3.4V_Zener_diode_V-A_characteristic.svg.png
gollark: A Zener diode is a special type of diode designed to reliably allow current to flow "backwards" when a certain set reverse voltage, known as the Zener voltage, is reached.
gollark: It's a diode thingy, but if you thingy it backward, it gets thingied at a thingy voltage.
gollark: It's basically like a monoid.
gollark: The GTech™ cuboid is capable of simulating the diode several orders of magnitude faster than "physical reality" can.

References

  1. Official website
  2. Alumni Profiles: ROGER KENNEDY, CLASS OF 1952 Archived 2012-05-12 at the Wayback Machine, Perspectives (UMN Law), Fall 2011, accessed December 16, 2011.
  3. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE ALMANAC; edited/compiled by Ben Moffett and Vickie Carson, Rocky Mountain Region, Public Affairs; National Park Service, 1991; revised 2006
  4. Washington Post obituary
  5. Notice of Kennedy's death
  6. Kennedy, Roger G. (2000-09-28). Burr, Hamilton, and Jefferson: A Study in Character. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199728220.
Government offices
Preceded by
James M. Ridenour
Director of the National Park Service
1993–1997
Succeeded by
Robert Stanton
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