

He was the intellectual architect and literary voice behind the most memorable phrases of the Kennedy presidency.
Ted Sorensen was the quiet force in the room where John F. Kennedy's ideas became history. Joining the young senator's staff in 1953, he quickly became far more than a speechwriter; he was a policy shaper, a trusted strategist, and Kennedy's closest intellectual companion. Sorensen's gift was his ability to channel Kennedy's own thoughts and ideals into language that was at once soaring and substantive. He helped craft the inaugural address's famous challenge—'Ask not what your country can do for you'—and the crystalline prose of crisis communications during the Cuban Missile Crisis. While he always insisted the ideas were Kennedy's, Sorensen's mastery of language gave them their enduring power, defining the rhetoric of hope and resolve that characterized Camelot.
1928–1945
Born between the Depression and the end of WWII. Too young to fight, old enough to remember. They became the conformist middle managers of the 1950s — and the civil rights leaders who quietly dismantled Jim Crow.
Ted was born in 1928, placing them squarely in The Silent Generation. The events that shaped this generation — world wars, depression, and rapid industrialization — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1928
#1 Movie
The Singing Fool
Best Picture
Wings
The world at every milestone
Alexander Fleming discovers penicillin; Mickey Mouse debuts
FDR's New Deal launches; Prohibition ends
Pearl Harbor attack brings the US into WWII
D-Day: Allied forces land at Normandy
United Nations holds its first General Assembly
NATO founded; Mao proclaims the People's Republic of China
NASA founded
Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy assassinated
First test-tube baby born
Pan Am Flight 103 bombed over Lockerbie
Google founded; Clinton impeachment
Barack Obama elected first Black US president; financial crisis
Deepwater Horizon oil spill; iPad launched
He was partially blind from childhood due to a retinal detachment.
He learned to write in a style that matched JFK's speaking rhythm by studying his boss's previous speeches and patterns.
After Kennedy's assassination, he practiced international law and wrote a definitive biography of the president.
“A young man who could change the times was himself changed by the times he changed.”