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Sargent Shriver

American diplomat, politician and activist (1915–2011)

Sargent Shriver

American diplomat, politician and activist (1915–2011)

FieldValue
nameSargent Shriver
imageSargent Shriver 1961.jpg
captionShriver in 1961
officeUnited States Ambassador to France
presidentLyndon B. Johnson
Richard Nixon
term_startMay 25, 1968
term_endMarch 25, 1970
predecessorCharles E. Bohlen
successorArthur K. Watson
office1Director of the Office of Economic Opportunity
president1Lyndon B. Johnson
term_start1October 16, 1964
term_end1March 23, 1968
predecessor1Position established
successor1Bertrand Harding
office21st Director of the Peace Corps
president2John F. Kennedy
Lyndon B. Johnson
term_start2March 22, 1961
term_end2February 28, 1966
predecessor2Position established
successor2Jack Vaughn
office3President of the Chicago Board of Education
term_start3October 26, 1955
term_end3October 10, 1960
predecessor3William B. Traynor
successor3Thomas L. Marshall
birth_nameRobert Sargent Shriver Jr.
birth_date
birth_placeWestminster, Maryland, U.S.
death_date
death_placeBethesda, Maryland, U.S.
resting_placeSt. Francis Xavier Cemetery
partyDemocratic
spouse
children{{flatlist
relatives{{plainlist
signatureSargent Shriver Signature.svg
signature_altCursive signature in ink
educationYale University (BA, LLB)
allegianceUnited States
branchUnited States Navy
serviceyears1941–1945
rankLieutenant commander
unit
battlesWorld War II
mawards{{Indented plainlist
* World War II Victory Medal<ref>{{cite webtitleSHRIVER-ROBERT The United States Navy Memorialurl=https://navylog.navymemorial.org/shriver-robert-2website=navylog.navymemorial.orgaccess-date=August 20, 2025}}

Richard Nixon Lyndon B. Johnson

  • Bobby
  • Maria
  • Timothy
  • Mark
  • Anthony
  • Shriver family
  • Kennedy family (by marriage)
  • Purple Heart
  • American Defense Service Medal
  • American Campaign Medal
  • Asiatic–Pacific Campaign Medal
  • World War II Victory Medal

Robert Sargent Shriver Jr. (November 9, 1915 – January 18, 2011) was an American diplomat, politician, and activist. He was a member of the Shriver family by birth, and a member of the Kennedy family through his marriage to Eunice Kennedy. Shriver was the driving force behind the creation of the Peace Corps, and founded the Job Corps, Head Start, VISTA, Upward Bound, and other programs as the architect of the 1960s war on poverty. He was the Democratic Party's nominee for vice president in the 1972 presidential election.

Born in Westminster, Maryland, Shriver attended Yale University, then Yale Law School, graduating in 1941. An opponent of U.S. entry into World War II, he helped establish the America First Committee but volunteered for the United States Navy before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. During the war, he served in the South Pacific, participating in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal. After being discharged from the navy, he worked as an assistant editor for Newsweek and met Eunice Kennedy, marrying her in 1953.

He worked on the 1960 presidential campaign of his brother-in-law, John F. Kennedy, and helped establish the Peace Corps after Kennedy's victory. After Kennedy's assassination, Shriver served in the administration of Lyndon B. Johnson and helped establish several anti-poverty programs as director of the Office of Economic Opportunity from October 16, 1964, to March 22, 1968. He also served as the United States Ambassador to France from 1968 to 1970. In 1972, Democratic vice presidential nominee Thomas Eagleton resigned from the ticket, and Shriver was chosen as his replacement. The Democratic ticket of George McGovern and Shriver lost in a landslide election defeat to Republican President Richard Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew. Shriver briefly sought the 1976 Democratic presidential nomination but dropped out of the race after the first set of primaries.

After leaving office, he resumed the practice of law, becoming a partner with Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson. He also served as president of the Special Olympics and was briefly a part-owner of the Baltimore Orioles. He was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2003 and died in Bethesda, Maryland, in 2011.

Early life and education

Robert Sargent Shriver Jr. was born in Westminster, Maryland, on November 9, 1915, the younger of two sons. Shriver's parents Robert Sargent Shriver Sr. and Hilda, who had also been born with the surname Shriver, were second cousins. His elder brother was Thomas Herbert Shriver. Shriver was a member of the Shriver family that has been in Maryland since 1721 and have occupied the Union Mills Homestead. His grandfather, Thomas Herbert Shriver, guided J. E. B. Stuart to the battle of Gettysburg when Thomas was just seventeen years of age. He was also a descendant of David Shriver, who signed the Maryland Constitution and Bill of Rights at Maryland's Constitutional Convention of 1776.

He spent his high school years at Canterbury School in New Milford, Connecticut, which he attended on a full scholarship. In his freshman year at Canterbury, he befriended future brother-in-law President John F. Kennedy. He was on Canterbury's baseball, basketball, and football teams, became the editor of the school's newspaper, and participated in choral and debating clubs. On June 9, 2023, Shriver was inducted into the Canterbury School Athletic Hall of Fame for all three sports. After graduating from Canterbury School in 1934, Shriver spent the summer in Germany as part of The Experiment in International Living, returning in the fall of 1934 to enter Yale University, where he was elected chairman of the Yale Daily News and made a brother in the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity, as well as a member of Yale's Scroll and Key society.

Military career

An early opponent of American involvement in World War II, Shriver was a founding member of the America First Committee, an organization started in 1940 by a group of Yale Law School students, also including future President Gerald Ford and future Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, which tried to keep the US out of the European war. Nevertheless, Shriver volunteered for the US Navy before the attack on Pearl Harbor and said he had a duty to serve his country even if he disagreed with its policies. He spent five years on active duty, mostly in the South Pacific, serving aboard the , reaching the rank of lieutenant commander (O-4). He was awarded a Purple Heart for wounds he received during the bombardment of Guadalcanal.

Family life

Shriver's relationship with the Kennedys began when he was working as an assistant editor at Newsweek after his discharge from the Navy. He met Eunice Kennedy at a party in New York, and shortly afterwards, family patriarch Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. asked him to look at diary entries written by his eldest son, Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., who had died in a plane crash while he was on a military mission during World War II. Shriver was later hired to manage the Merchandise Mart, part of Kennedy's business empire, in Chicago, Illinois.

After a seven-year courtship, Shriver married Eunice Kennedy on May 23, 1953, at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City. She was the third daughter of Joseph Kennedy Sr. and Rose Kennedy.

They had five children: Robert Sargent "Bobby" Shriver III (born April 28, 1954), Maria Owings Shriver (born November 6, 1955), Timothy Perry Shriver (born August 29, 1959), Mark Kennedy Shriver (born February 17, 1964), and Anthony Paul Kennedy Shriver (born July 20, 1965). The Shrivers were married for 56 years, and often worked together on projects.

Shriver was admitted to practice law in the District of Columbia, Illinois, and New York, and at the US Supreme Court.

A devout Catholic, Shriver attended daily Mass and always carried a rosary of well-worn wooden beads. He was critical of abortion and was a signatory to "A New Compact of Care: Caring about Women, Caring for the Unborn", which appeared in The New York Times in July 1992 and stated that "To establish justice and to promote the general welfare, America does not need the abortion license. What America needs are policies that responsibly protect and advance the interest of mothers and their children, both before and after birth."

Public service and political career

1950s

In May 1954, Shriver was appointed to the Chicago Board of Education by Chicago mayor Martin H. Kennelly. On October 26, 1955, Shriver was chosen to serve as president of the Chicago Board of Education by a vote of the board. Shriver would serve in the position of president for five years, resigning from the position on October 10, 1960. At the time he became president of the board, he was the second-youngest individual to hold that office, being only 39. At the time, Chicago Public Schools was the second-largest school district in the United States.

Shriver also served as director of the Catholic Interracial Council, a group created to advocate for desegregation in Chicago schools.

Shriver considered several runs for statewide office. His first consideration was for the Democratic nomination in the 1956 Illinois gubernatorial election. Shriver had been courted by many Chicago Democrats, including Mayor Richard J. Daley, but ultimately chose to stay out of the election. The primary was won by Cook County treasurer Herbert C. Paschen, who would be forced to withdraw as the nominee after becoming embroiled in scandals surrounding his work as Treasurer. District Court Judge Richard B. Austin, was chosen as the replacement and went on to narrowly lose the election to incumbent Governor William Stratton.

1960s

Shriver and JFK at the White House in August 1961.

In 1960, Shriver once again received serious courting by Democratic leaders in both Chicago and across the state to enter the Democratic primary for the 1960 Illinois gubernatorial election. Shriver even met with Mayor Daley and the Cook County Democratic Committee to gauge a possible run at Daley's urging. However his father-in-law, Joseph P. Kennedy, told Shriver he would not be able to run or else he could seriously cripple the Presidential campaign of his brother-in-law, John F. Kennedy. His father-in-law cited the oversaturation of Catholic candidates in Illinois could cost the Democrats the state in November (Kennedy, Shriver, and Daley were all Catholic).

When John F. Kennedy ran for president, Shriver worked as a political and organization coordinator in the Wisconsin and West Virginia primaries. During Kennedy's presidential term, Shriver founded and served as the first director of the Peace Corps from March 22, 1961, to February 28, 1966.

Shriver was credited with convincing a hesitant Kennedy to contact Coretta Scott King after her husband, prominent civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr., was jailed for civil disobedience in Georgia in October 1960. Kennedy's phone call to Coretta Scott King was credited with helping to strengthen black support for Kennedy's candidacy.

After Kennedy's assassination, Shriver continued to serve as Director of the Peace Corps and served as Special Assistant to President Lyndon Johnson. Under Johnson, he created the Office of Economic Opportunity and served as its first director. He is known as the "architect" of the Johnson administration's "war on poverty". Hired by President Johnson to be the "salesman" for Johnson's war on poverty initiative, Shriver initially was "not interested in hearing about community action proposals." The Job Corps movement was more consistent with his goals. Thus, soon after his appointment, Shriver "moved quickly to reconsider the proposed anti-poverty initiative."

Shriver founded numerous social programs and organizations, including Head Start, VISTA, Job Corps, Community Action, Upward Bound, Foster Grandparents, Legal Services, the National Clearinghouse for Legal Services (now the Shriver Center), Indian and Migrant Opportunities and Neighborhood Health Services, in addition to directing the Peace Corps. He was active in the Special Olympics, which was founded in 1968 by his wife Eunice.

Shriver was awarded the Pacem in Terris Peace and Freedom Award in 1967. It was named after a 1963 encyclical letter by Pope John XXIII that calls upon all people of good will to secure peace among all nations. Pacem in terris is Latin for 'Peace on Earth'.

In 1964 Shriver was considered one of the primary finalists on Johnson's shortlist to be vice president. After weighing the benefits of Shriver as the second spot on the ticket, Johnson ultimately chose Hubert Humphrey. Shriver again considered running for Governor of Illinois in the 1964 Illinois gubernatorial election. However, he demurred after being asked by President Johnson to stay on and continue leading the creation of many of the aforementioned war on poverty programs that would become part of the Great Society.

In 1968, Shriver was once again seriously courted by Illinois Democrats for both the 1968 Illinois gubernatorial election against increasingly unpopular incumbent Governor Otto Kerner, Jr. and the 1968 United States Senate election in Illinois against incumbent Republican Everett Dirksen. Shriver expressed little interest in serving in the Senate, not wanting to be overshadowed by his brothers-in-law Ted Kennedy and specifically Robert Kennedy, who he had expected to run for president in 1972. To move Shriver toward a run, Daley pitched to Illinois Democratic leaders and Shriver on recruiting Illinois State Treasurer Adlai E. Stevenson III to run for the Senate seat with Shriver running for Governor. Shriver even received Johnson's blessing to make the run as part of Daley's "Dream Ticket", should he choose to do so. However, when Stevenson spoke out against the Vietnam War, Daley rejected Stevenson's candidacy and again tried to recruit Shriver for the Senate seat. Johnson had offered Shriver the post of U.S. Ambassador to France, but asked for time to consider the offer, during which he considered his potential candidacy. When Stevenson lost Daley's support for the Senate seat and began trying to recruit Shriver again, Shriver decided to accept Johnson's offer of the Ambassadorship.

Shriver served as U.S. Ambassador to France from 1968 to 1970, becoming a quasi-celebrity among the French for bringing what Time magazine called "a rare and welcome panache" to the normally sedate world of international diplomacy. Upon returning to the United States in 1970, Shriver was speculated to be considering challenging incumbent Democratic Governor Marvin Mandel for the Democratic nomination for the 1970 Maryland gubernatorial election, reports he did nothing to dissuade despite Mandel's sizable campaign fund and being the state's first Jewish Governor. Mandel had been elected by the Maryland Legislature to finish out the term Spiro Agnew had been elected to in 1966, but resigned from after being elected Vice President in 1968. After traveling the state to gauge the support a potential candidacy might have, Shriver met with Mandel in the Governor's office. After emerging from the meeting, Shriver declined to be a candidate. Mandel recalled years later, "We had a long discussion, and when it was over, he wasn't a candidate."

Vice Presidential candidacy

Main article: United States presidential election, 1972

During the 1972 Democratic National Convention in Miami Beach, Florida, George McGovern considered Shriver as a vice presidential candidate, but his campaign was unable to reach Shriver, who was at the time visiting Moscow, Soviet Union.{{cite news | access-date = March 21, 2016

Presidential candidacy

Main article: 1976 Democratic Party presidential primaries

Shriver unsuccessfully sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 1976. In the months before the primaries began, political observers thought that Shriver would draw strength from legions of former colleagues from the Peace Corps and the war on poverty programs, and he was even seen as an inheritor of the Kennedy legacy, but neither theory proved true. His candidacy was short-lived and he returned to private life.

Life after politics

Shriver and wife, Eunice, in 1999

Shriver was a partner of the Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson law firm in Washington, D.C., where he specialized in international law and foreign affairs, beginning in 1971. He retired as partner in 1986 and was then named of counsel to the firm.

In 1981, Shriver was appointed to the Rockefeller University Council, an organization devoted exclusively to research and graduate education in the biomedical and related sciences.

In 1984, he was elected president of Special Olympics by the board of directors; as president, he directed the operation and international development of sports programs around the world. Six years later, in 1990, he was appointed chairman of the board of Special Olympics.

He was an investor in the Baltimore Orioles along with his eldest son Bobby Shriver, Eli Jacobs, and Larry Lucchino from 1989 to 1993.

Illness and death

Shriver was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2003. In 2004, his daughter, Maria, published a children's book, What's Happening to Grandpa?, to help explain Alzheimer's to children. The book gives suggestions on how to help and to show love to an elderly person with the disease. In July 2007, Shriver's son-in-law, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, speaking in favor of stem-cell research, said that Shriver's Alzheimer's disease had advanced to the point that "Today, he does not even recognize his wife." Maria Shriver discusses her father's worsening condition in a segment for the four-part 2009 HBO documentary series The Alzheimer's Project called Grandpa, Do You Know Who I Am?, including describing a moment when she decided to stop trying to correct his various delusions.

On August 11, 2009, Shriver's wife of 56 years, Eunice, died at the age of 88. He attended her wake and funeral in Centerville and Hyannis, Massachusetts. Two weeks later, on August 29, 2009, he attended the funeral of her brother Ted Kennedy in Boston, Massachusetts.

Shriver died on January 18, 2011, in Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, at age 95.{{cite news| url = https://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/19/us/politics/19shriver.html

Legacy

In 1968, he was awarded the Laetare Medal by the University of Notre Dame, the oldest and most prestigious award for American Catholics.

In 1993, Shriver received the Franklin D. Roosevelt Freedom From Want Award. On August 8, 1994, Shriver received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States' highest civilian honor, from President Bill Clinton.

In December 1993, the University of Maryland, Baltimore County created the Shriver Center in honor of Shriver and his wife. The center serves as the university's civic engagement, and applied learning organization. The Shriver Center also is home to the Shriver Peaceworker Program and the Shriver Living Learning Community.

The Job Corps dedicated a center to his name in 1998 – the "Shriver Job Corps Center" – located in Devens, Massachusetts. The National Clearinghouse for Legal Services (renamed the National Center on Poverty Law in 1995) was renamed the Shriver Center in 2002 and each year awards a Sargent Shriver Award for Equal Justice. The Shriver Center on Poverty Law has announced that it will close at the end of 2025.

Sargent Shriver Elementary School, located in Silver Spring, Maryland, is named after him.

In January 2008, a documentary film about Shriver aired on PBS, titled American Idealist: The Story of Sargent Shriver.

The Kennedy Shriver Aquatic Center in Bethesda, Maryland, is named after him and Eunice Kennedy Shriver.

Following his death, Daniel Larison wrote:

Shriver was an admirable, principled, and conscientious man who respected the dignity and sanctity of human life, and he also happened to be a contemporary and in-law of Kennedy. Not only did Shriver represent a "link" with JFK, but he represented a particular culture of white ethnic Catholic Democratic politics that has been gradually disappearing for the last fifty years. A pro-life Catholic, Shriver had been a founding member of the America First Committee, and more famously he was also on the 1972 antiwar ticket with George McGovern. In short, he represented much of what was good in the Democratic Party of his time.

Electoral history

1972 United States presidential election

  • Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew (R) (inc.) – 47,168,710 (60.7%) and 520 electoral votes (49 states carried)
  • George McGovern/Sargent Shriver (D) – 29,173,222 (37.5%) and 17 electoral votes (1 state and D.C. carried)
  • John Hospers/Theodora Nathan (Libertarian) – 3,674 (0.00%) and 1 electoral vote (Republican faithless elector)
  • John G. Schmitz/Thomas J. Anderson (AI) – 1,100,868 (1.4%) and 0 electoral votes
  • Linda Jenness/Andrew Pulley (Socialist Workers) – 83,380 (0.1%)
  • Benjamin Spock/Julius Hobson (People's) – 78,759 (0.1%)

1976 Democratic presidential primaries

  • Jimmy Carter – 6,235,609 (39.27%)
  • Jerry Brown – 2,449,374 (15.43%)
  • George Wallace – 1,955,388 (12.31%)
  • Mo Udall – 1,611,754 (10.15%)
  • Henry M. Jackson – 1,134,375 (7.14%)
  • Frank Church – 830,818 (5.23%)
  • Robert Byrd – 340,309 (2.14%)
  • Sargent Shriver – 304,399 (1.92%)
  • Unpledged – 283,437 (1.79%)
  • Ellen McCormack – 238,027 (1.50%)
  • Fred R. Harris – 234,568 (1.48%)
  • Milton Shapp – 88,254 (0.56%)
  • Birch Bayh – 86,438 (0.54%)
  • Hubert Humphrey – 61,992 (0.39%)
  • Ted Kennedy – 19,805 (0.13%)
  • Lloyd Bentsen – 4,046 (0.03%)
  • Terry Sanford – 404 (0.00%)

Portrayals in film

  • The film Too Young the Hero (1988), about the life of Calvin Graham, features a scene during World War II in which Graham (played by Ricky Schroder) meets Shriver (played by Carl Mueller).
  • Al Conti portrays Shriver in the 1983 miniseries Kennedy.
  • He is played by David De Beck in the 2018 film Chappaquiddick.

References

References

  1. "SHRIVER-ROBERT {{!}} The United States Navy Memorial".
  2. (January 19, 2011). "Sargent Shriver obituary: Brother-in-law of JFK who strove on behalf of America's poor".
  3. [http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=26617 Remarks at the Swearing In of Sargent Shriver as Director, Office of Economic Opportunity.] The American Presidency Project. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  4. (2000). "The Kennedy Family and the Story of Mental Retardation". Temple University Press.
  5. "Shriver Family". Union Mills Homestead.
  6. "Maryland Constitutional Convention, 1776". [[Maryland State Archives]].
  7. "Thomas Herbert Shriver, MSA SC 3520-12824". Maryland State Archives.
  8. (February 22, 2011). "R. Sargent Shriver built roots at New Milford's Canterbury School". News-Times.
  9. "Yale Daily News Historical Archive".
  10. (2003). "A story of America First: the men and women who opposed U.S. intervention in World War II". Praeger.
  11. Schoifet, Mark. (January 19, 2011). "Sargent Shriver, Kennedy In-Law, Founder of U.S. Peace Corps, Dies at 95". Bloomberg.
  12. Patricia Sullivan. (January 18, 2011). "Sargent Shriver dies at 95; founded Peace Corps". [[The Washington Post]].
  13. "R(obert) Sargent Shriver: Papers (#214) – John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum". Jfklibrary.org.
  14. Shriver, Mark. (June 5, 2012). "A Good Man: Rediscovering My Father, Sargent Shriver". Henry Holt and Company.
  15. "Sargent Shriver". Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP.
  16. (August 30, 2002). "Sargent Shriver and the politics of life". National Catholic Reporter.
  17. (January 19, 2011). "Pro-Life Liberal Sargent Shriver Dies". Catholic Online.
  18. (October 27, 1955). "SARGENT S. SHRIVER, 39, HEADS SCHOOL BOARD". Chicago Tribune.
  19. Mehren, Elizabeth. (January 18, 2011). "R. Sargent Shriver dies at 95; 'unmatched' public servant and Kennedy in-law". [[Los Angeles Times]].
  20. (August 14, 1972). "When Sargent Shriver Ran for Vice-President".
  21. (October 23, 1960). "New School Board President Details Goal for Chicago Education". Chicago Tribune.
  22. (October 27, 1955). "Young Man Heads Chicago School Board". The Winona Daily News.
  23. (January 19, 2011). "Sargent Shriver, former VP nominee, dies". Reuters.
  24. Stossel, 2004.
  25. (January 7, 1960). "Rough-and-Tumble Election". Arlington Heights Herald.
  26. (January 18, 2011). "R. Sargent Shriver, Peace Corps Leader, Dies at 95". The New York Times.
  27. "About the Peace Corps : Past Directors".
  28. (January 18, 2011). "R. Sargent Shriver, 1915-2011". Chicago Tribune.
  29. (December 15, 1988). "How Kennedy Won the Black Vote : A Call to Coretta King Brought Groundswell of Support". Los Angeles Times.
  30. (June 20, 2017). "JFK, MLK and the Phone Call That Changed History".
  31. (May 16, 1990). "W. B. Mullins, 52, A Founding Official Of the Peace Corps". The New York Times.
  32. Vinovskis, M. A. (2008) Birth of Head Start: Preschool education policies in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. pp. 42-43
  33. "Head Start History: 1965–Present". Pennsylvania Head Start Association.
  34. (November 1, 1968). "Diplomacy: The Liveliest Ambassador".
  35. [https://archive.today/20240621020339/https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/if-sargent-shriver-had-run-for-governor-of-maryland-/2011/01/22/ABLyxuD_story.html Unknown]
  36. Koster, R. M.. (February 1976). "The Democratic Super Bowl". Harper's Foundation.
  37. (February 1, 2005). "JFK Presidential Library Opens Sargent Shriver Collection". John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum.
  38. Hyman, Mark S. "Orioles are sold: $70 million; Buyers say team will stay," ''[[The Baltimore Sun]]'', December 7, 1988
  39. (April 28, 2004). "What's Happening to Grandpa?". Little, Brown Young Readers.
  40. (May 31, 2007). "Terminator gunning to save lives; California governor, McGuinty sign stem-cell research deal in bid to 'cure a lot' of illnesses". [[Toronto Star]].
  41. HBO Documentary, The Alzheimer's Project, 2009, [http://www.hbo.com/alzheimers/grandpa-do-you-know-who-i-am.html ''Grandpa, Do You Know Who I Am?''] with Maria Shriver.
  42. (August 13, 2009). "Special Olympians, family celebrate Eunice Kennedy Shriver". Associated Press via turnto10.com.
  43. Potempa, Philip. (September 1, 2009). "OFFBEAT: Sen. Ted Kennedy's funeral unites family with words of inspiration". Times of Northwest Indiana.
  44. McGuire, Bill. (January 18, 2011). "Sargent Shriver Dies: Peace Corps Founder, VP Candidate". ABC News.
  45. (January 18, 2011). "Peace Corps Mourns the Loss of Founder and Visionary Father, Sargent Shriver". [[Peace Corps]].
  46. "Recipients". University of Notre Dame.
  47. "History". [[University of Maryland, Baltimore County]].
  48. Schada, Emilie. (Fall 2005). "Shriver, Robert Sargent (Informational Paper)". Learning to Give.
  49. "Our Founder, Sargent Shriver". SHRIVER CENTER: Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law.
  50. "Shriver Center on Poverty Law to Sunset the End of 2025". Shriver Center on Poverty Law.
  51. (September 13, 2006). "New school year, new elementary school". Gazette.net.
  52. (January 24, 2011). "Who is Sargent Shriver?". Montgomeryschoolsmd.org.
  53. "Kennedy Shriver Aquatic Center - Department of Recreation - Montgomery County, Maryland".
  54. Larison, Daniel [http://www.amconmag.com/larison/2011/01/24/shriver-and-lieberman/ Shriver and Lieberman], ''[[The American Conservative]]''
  55. "US President – D Primaries Race – Feb 01, 1976". Our Campaigns.
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