
Funerals often are planned by the presidents themselves, who usually have years after leaving the White House to ponder how they want to be memorialized.
WASHINGTON โ Jimmy Carter’s memorial journey will end at his house in the tiny town of Plains, Georgia, where he grew up on a peanut farm. That is where his wife, Rosalynn, was laid to rest last year in a burial plot that they chose years ago.
But before Carter reaches his humble final destination, there will be an interstate choreography of grief, ceremony and logistics that is characteristic of state funerals. Ever since the nationโs founding, America has bid farewell to former presidents with an intricate series of events weaving together longstanding traditions and personal touches.
Funerals often are planned by the presidents themselves, who usually have years after leaving the White House to ponder how they want to be memorialized.
โThey are very much involved in the planning process, and the decisions that they make tell us a lot about who they are, how they see the presidency, and how they want to be remembered by the American people,โ said Matthew Costello, senior historian for the White House Historical Association, who co-wrote a book called โMourning the Presidents: Loss and Legacy in American Culture.โ
Carter had more time to plan than most. He lived for 43 years after his presidency ended, the longest post-presidency in U.S. history, before dying Sunday at 100.
Many details of his funeral remain under wraps, at the discretion of the family and military units that are responsible for carrying out the plans. Most presidents lie in state in the U.S. Capitol, and there is usually a service at Washington National Cathedral.
President Joe Biden let slip last year that Carter had asked him to give a eulogy. (โExcuse me, I shouldnโt say that,โ Biden admitted.)
Biden said Sunday his team is working with Carter’s family and others โto see to it that he is remembered appropriately, here in the United States and around the world.โ Carterโs son Chip is his main point of contact, though Biden said he has spoken with all the Carter children.
He described a process underway โthat will take a little timeโ but will result in a โmajor service in Washington, D.C.โ for Carter, which Biden scheduled for Jan. 9.
Sometimes former presidents help with even the smallest details.
Jeffrey Engel, director of the Center for Presidential History at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, recalled meeting with George H.W. Bush shortly after the former president revised the seating chart for his funeral.
โAnd I said, โIs that weird? You know, itโs your own death,โโ Engel recalled. โAnd he said, โYou know, you do it every three months. You kind of get used to it.โโ


President Dwight Eisenhower, who commanded Allied troops during World War II before becoming a politician, wanted to be buried in an $80 government-issued casket. Apart from a glass seal that was added to the design, it was indistinguishable from the casket of any other solider.
Details of the processions also can reflect aspects of a presidentโs life. Ronald Reaganโs casket was carried up the west steps of the U.S. Capitol, which face his home state of California. When Gerald Ford died, his casket was brought through the House side of the building, a nod to his years as a lawmaker.
The job of carrying out presidential funerals falls to theย Joint Task Force-National Capital Region, which includes 4,000 military and civilian personnel. The unit said in a statement that it โis privileged to provide this support on behalf of the nation.โ
Presidential funerals can leave lasting marks on the American consciousness. One of the most memorable descriptions of George Washington โ โfirst in war, first in peace, and first in the hearts of his countrymenโ โ came from a eulogy that was widely reprinted when the countryโs first leader died.
After John F. Kennedy was assassinated, his son John Jr. was photographed saluting the casket. Kennedy’s casket was transported down Pennsylvania Avenue on the same caisson that carried Abraham Lincoln after he was assassinated a century earlier, and a riderless horse was included in the procession.
Kennedyโs was the first presidential funeral to be widely televised.


โTechnology has made mourning in a way more accessible, more democratic. More people have the opportunity to take a moment and reflect upon what this person meant,โ Costello said. โAnd I think it also opens the door to more people being involved in the grieving process.โ
In many democratic countries, the head of state and the head of government are two different people. The United States combines both roles, ceremonial and chief executive, into the office of the presidency.
โSince we have no national figure other than the president, weโve essentially taken all the traditional weight and civic emotion that is put on to the death or the birth or a wedding for a sovereign or a king and placed it on the heads of the presidents,โ Engel said. โAnd there arenโt that many of them, to be honest. So whenever one of them passes, itโs unusual and a big deal.โ
He described funerals as a moment to remember โthat weโre all in this togetherโ and โthis man was the president for all of us, whether youโre a Republican or a Democrat.”


However, in todayโs divided politics, state funerals can produce awkward, even tense, moments.
During George H.W. Bushโs funeral in 2018, the audience included President Donald Trump. He shook hands with former President Barack Obama, his predecessor, but did not interact with Hillary Clinton, who he defeated in the 2016 election, or her husband, former President Bill Clinton.
โThese funerals are always political,โ Engel said. โWhatever happens in the Carter funeral is going to be political, frankly, whether people around the Carter family want it to be or not.โ


Associated Press video journalist Nathan Ellgren contributed to this report.

