Even after a cancer diagnosis, hip surgery, and 14 stitches to the head, Jimmy Carter didn't let age or illness keep him from building houses with Habitat for Humanity.
For many, building homes for Habitat for Humanity is a once or twice in a lifetime experience. Many of the non-profit’s volunteers work on its projects through school or mission trips, or as fulfillment for required volunteer hours.
But not former president Jimmy Carter. Many volunteers can boast of building one or two homes, but through the Carter Work Project, an annual week-long build around the globe, Jimmy Carter helped build more than 4,000 houses starting in the 1980s.
Even more impressive is the fact that he contributed to projects while recovering from hip, liver, and brain cancer surgeries. And even at age 95, he was still no stranger to a hammer.
Jimmy Carter’s Commitment To Giving Back
In March of 1984, three years after leaving the Oval Office, Jimmy Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, volunteered to build houses for Habitat for Humanity in Americus, Georgia. What they saw astounded them.
“Habitat has successfully removed the stigma of charity by substituting it with a sense of partnership,” Jimmy Carter said about the organization. “The people who will live in the homes work side by side with the volunteers, so they feel very much that they are on an equal level.”
Indeed, that partnership is what inspired the Carter family the most.
Moved by the way that the project aligned with their religious values and their love of giving back, the Carters invited Habitat for Humanity to partner with the Carter Center, the family’s own non-profit for human rights. Together, the two organizations founded the Carter Work Project, which brings Habitat builds to different parts of the world for week-long projects once a year.
After that point, the Carters dedicated generous portions of their time to Habitat builds. Between 1984 and 2019, the couple contributed to the building or repairing of roughly 4,331 homes. Along with the help of 103,000 volunteers, they built those houses in 14 different countries.
Even as recently as October 2019, the Carters contributed to a build in Nashville, Tennessee in – despite the fact that he had fallen and gotten stitches in his forehead the day before.
Even Injury Couldn’t Stop Jimmy Carter’s Work With Habitat For Humanity
In October 2019, Jimmy Carter fell in his Plains, Georgia home and nicked his head on a cabinet. He was taken to a hospital and received 14 stitches and an eye patch, and was told to rest up.
Instead, he traveled to Nashville, for a week-long Habitat for Humanity build. The Carter Center reported that the former president and first lady planned on building 21 homes in the area, alongside several hundred volunteers including country music legends Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood.
Despite his medical setback, the Carters showed up in full force for the build, and even poked fun at the eyepatch the former president was sporting. He admitted he didn’t know how much physical effort he was going to be able to put into the project, but that he would still be there to support in any other way he could.
Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter contributed something to each of the houses. “All 21 houses will have something we built,” he said.
His forehead injury wasn’t the only health setback he suffered before the October build. He underwent hip surgery that March, and despite the fact that he was ordered to rest, he continued to plan for the October trip, making statements and plans in full anticipation that he would be there.
In 2017, Carter was building homes in Canada when he collapsed from dehydration. Despite the strenuous conditions, the 92-year-old Carter had persevered and worked through the heat of the day. Even after being treated, the build continued.
Jimmy Carter Built Houses For The Needy Even After Having Cancer
In 2015, Jimmy Carter announced that he had been diagnosed with melanoma, and that despite an operation to remove part of his liver, the cancer seemed to be spreading. Four spots had been discovered in his brain, and Carter believed that he had just weeks to live.
One question that arose during the announcement of the diagnosis was whether or not Carter would continue the charity work he’d become so well known for. The resounding answer? Absolutely.
“Habitat gives us an opportunity which is very difficult to find: to reach out and work side by side with those who never have had a decent home — but work with them on a completely equal basis,” he said of the nonprofit. “It’s not a big-shot, little-shot relationship. It’s a sense of equality.”
Even after his diagnosis and several surgeries and treatments, Carter continued to step out into the field. Whether he was simply hammering a few nails, or climbing on second-story beams, Carter never backed out of a project because he wasn’t feeling well.
In the following few years, Carter continuously devoted time to the organization – and many others – with a mostly clean bill of health.
In March of 2016 he announced that he no longer needed cancer treatment. After undergoing extensive MRI testing, it was revealed that the disease was no longer spreading.
“The doctors determined that I didn’t need any more treatment,” Carter said to his Sunday school class in Plains, Georgia. “So I’m not going to have any more treatment.”
As far as his charity work went, there was no stopping Jimmy Carter. As long as he was physically able, he supported Habitat for Humanity with his time, energy, and resources, and continued to live a life of legendary humanitarianism.
This remained true right up until his death at age 100 on December 29, 2024.
After learning about the astounding number of houses Jimmy Carter has helped build, learn more about President Jimmy Carter with this list of 23 amazing facts. Then, read the inspiring story of Jimmy Carter’s own house.