JFK’s 1960 Campaign: Rare Photos

Hank Walker—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images
In stark, revealing contrast to the glamorous Kennedy of popular myth, JFK on the stump was a tough, savvy campaigner. Well aware that much of the country distrusted almost everything about him -- his Massachusetts-liberal politics, his Boston accent, his Roman Catholicism -- like any good politician he set about winning over the skeptics by employing the very gifts that generated such suspicion in those who knew little about him.
Great Leaders
'60s

On November 8, 1960, John F. Kennedy was elected president of the United States, defeating Richard Nixon in one of the closest national elections of the 20th century. At 43, Kennedy was (and remains) the youngest person elected to the office, and it was largely this quality in the man and his family — an engaging, youthful dynamism — that so captured the imagination of millions across the country and, ultimately, across the world.

As Kennedy and his team ran a heady, propulsive campaign unlike any America had seen, LIFE’s best photographers (Paul Schutzer, Alfred Eisenstaedt, George Silk, et al.) were there, chronicling the grind of never-ending public appearances and the quieter moments JFK spent with advisers, with Jackie, and — rarest of all — alone, with his own thoughts.

In the midst of this fraught and divisive election season, LIFE.com presents rare photos (most were never published in LIFE magazine) of an enigmatic, intensely ambitious man making history, as he and his entourage ushered in the poignantly brief American era known ever after as “Camelot.”

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